Alexander’s Dictum and the Reality of Familiar Objects
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01/01/2003
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Resumo |
Alexander's Dictum--"to be is to have causal powers"--appears to furnish an argument against the reality of familiar medium-sized objects. For every time a familiar object appears to cause a familiar macro-event, it sets up a rival claim by its component microparticles to have caused the complex swarm of microphysical events that composes into that macro-event. But this argument, argues this paper, wrongly assumes that even after familiar objects are removed from the picture, there is a phenomenon of joint causation which unites all and only the microparticles within each familiar object. |
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application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://digitalcommons.uconn.edu/philo_articles/1 http://digitalcommons.uconn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=philo_articles |
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DigitalCommons@UConn |
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Articles |
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text |