Kinds of being : a study of individuation, identity and the logic of sortal terms

Bibliographic Information

Kinds of being : a study of individuation, identity and the logic of sortal terms

E.J. Lowe

(Aristotelian Society series, v. 10)

Blackwell, 1989

Available at  / 16 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In "Kinds of Being" Johathan Lowe examines a cluster of interrelated issues in metaphysics, logic and the philosophy of language, focusing on the role of sortal concepts in the determination of individuation and identity. Through a discussion of the issues of personal identity and the mind/body problem, the author advances the claim that where sortal concepts are governed by different criteria of identity it makes no sense to identify individuals falling under these different concepts. As such this is a defence of the absoluteness of identity and an argument against identifying persons with their bodies. It also represents a challenge to the assumptions of nominalists and orthodox logicians. Jonathan Lowe concludes this study with an examination of the semantics and logic of sortal terms in natural language, paying particular attention to their place in the formulation and empirical confirmation of scientific laws and theories.

Table of Contents

  • Sortal Terms and Criteria of Identity
  • Individuals, Sorts and Instantiation
  • The Absoluteness of Identity - A Defence Appendix - Some Formal Principles and Arguments
  • Identity and Constitution
  • Parts and Wholes
  • Persons and their Bodies - Matter and Organisms, Organisms and Persons, Is There a Criterion of Personal Identity?
  • Sortal Terms and Natural Laws
  • Laws, Dispositions and Sortal Logic Appendix - An Axiomatic System of Sortal Logic
  • Complex Sortal Terms and the Differentiation of Sorts.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top