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Appendix 1 - The concrete–abstract distinction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2009

Joshua Hoffman
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Gary S. Rosenkrantz
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Greensboro
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Summary

A concrete name is a name which stands for a thing; an abstract name is a name which stands for an attribute of a thing.

J. S. Mill A System of Logic I. ii. § 4 (1846)

Realists and antirealists presuppose an intuitive distinction between abstracta and concreta in their debates about the problem of universals. Examples of abstracta are squareness (a property), betweenness (a relation), there being horses (a proposition), the null set, and the number 7. Examples of concreta are a stone (a material substance), God (a disembodied spiritual substance), Hurricane Andrew (an event), instants and seconds (times), points and expanses of space (places), the particular wisdom of Socrates (a trope), the sum of Earth and Mars (a collection), the Earth's surface (a limit), and shadows and holes (privations). It is desirable that a philosophical analysis of the concrete–abstract distinction allow for the possibility of entities of any intelligible sorts, given some plausible view about the nature, existence conditions, and interrelationships of entities of those sorts. This desideratum seems to require allowing for the possibility of entities of the aforementioned kinds. Six attempts have been made to analyze the concrete–abstract distinction.

  1. Unlike abstracta, concreta are spatially located or spatially related to something.

  2. Unlike abstracta, concreta are capable of moving or undergoing intrinsic change.

  3. Concreta have contingent existence, whereas abstracta have necessary existence.

  4. Unlike concreta, abstracta are exemplifiable.

  5. Unlike concreta, abstracta are (intellectually) graspable.

  6. Unlike abstracta, concreta can be causes or effects.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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