This work is ''a systematic ontology.'' Ontology is the study of being
as such, and a systematic ontology is an account of the most
fundamental ways of being something or other - of what they are and of
how they are related to each other. The questions it pursues are not
primarily about what causes things, but about what things are or
consist in - though causal questions cannot be totally avoided. The
title of the work, What Is, and What Is in Itself, marks the most
important distinction in ways of being. What is includes everything
there is, but not everything there is included in what is in itself.
The first five chapters of the book define and examine the ways of
being: in chapters 1 and 2, being actual or existing, or even just
being something without existing or being actual; in chapter 3, being
an intentional object, and perhaps a merely intentional object; in
chapter 4, relations between things and their properties; and in
chapter 5, being a thing in itself. Chapter 6 discusses whether only
conscious beings are things in themselves, and suggests an affirmative
answer. Chapter 7 discusses the epistemology of ontology. Chapters 8
and 9 discuss issues about thisness and identity. And chapters 10 and
11 discuss mainly occasionalist and panentheist answers to questions
about the causal unity of the universe.
Les mer
A Systematic Ontology
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192668790
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
OUP Oxford
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter