Questions tagged [universals]

To be used when discussing the philosophical concept of universals.

According to Boethius (ca. 480-524)

A universal has to be common to several particulars

in its entirety, and not only in part
simultaneously, and not in a temporal succession, and
it should constitute the substance of its particulars.

To say of some particular thing that it has some kind of generic property (or higher-order relation), type (or higher-order kind) that all things of that nature exhibit or manifest. By way of example, to start by giving an ostensive definition, the greenness shared by all green things and the humanity shared by all individual persons count as universals.

An explanation of what is meant by the parenthetical "higher-order" in the preceding paragraph. Take location to be a universal property of all things with extension. Then the universal relation of next to hinges on the notion of location. Take humanity to be the universal/essential category belonging to all individual persons. Then the universal kind of mammal encompasses the notion of humanity.

Discussions of universals can be traced right back to the dawn of Western Philosophy, back to some of Plato's dialogues (Parmenides, Phaedo, Republic (esp. books V-VII;X), Sophist) and Aristotle's monographs (Categories, Metaphysics) -- all to be found at the Internet Classics Archive hosted by MIT.

See also:

42 questions
4
votes
6 answers

Can a universal law be disproved?

I need to know that a universal law like the First Law Of Motion may be disproved or not. I mean, that how can we make sure that the particular law will hold true at all places of the universe?
serv0id
  • 223
  • 2
  • 6
3
votes
2 answers

Question about problem of universals

I'm looking for a clarification. Do philosophers generally agree that the use of statements involving universals are meaningful, even if the specific ontological status of the universal is in dispute? For example: "Any square has four…
Ameet Sharma
  • 3,001
  • 1
  • 13
  • 25