Knowledge (XXG)

Something (concept)

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vague terms, asserting that "ontological assertions of common sense are correct if the quantifiers—such words as "something" and "anything"—are restricted roughly to ordinary or familiar things."
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A question that follows from this is whether it is ever actually possible for there to be nothing at all, or whether there must always be something.
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The idea that "something" is the opposite of "nothing" has existed at least since it was proposed by the
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in the 3rd century. One of the most basic questions of both science and philosophy is:
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as "there exists," "there is at least one," or "for some." It expresses that a
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The Puzzle of Existence: Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?
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For the Love of Wisdom: Essays on the Nature of Philosophy
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Quantifier Variance and Realism: Essays in Metaontology
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of an existential quantifier is true of at least one
291:, Translator: Roger Wasserman, Ignatius Press, 2006 212:Fragments of Iamblichus' Commentary on the Timaeus 77:why is there something rather than nothing at all? 255:Robert Eustis Morsberger, Janet Rankin Aiken, 100:itself, a word always classified as a noun". 8: 52:without needing to address the existence of 214:, John Myles Dillon trans. (1973), p. 211. 162:to at least one member of the domain. It 187: 7: 44:, contrasting with the concept of 14: 60:, has pointed out that these are 1: 287:Josef Pieper, Berthold Wald, 274:History of Western Philosophy 257:Commonsense Grammar and Style 166:that a predicate within the 150:. In other terms, it is the 90:are commonly classified as 367: 226:, Tyron Goldschmidt, ed., 120:existential quantification 110:Existential quantification 107: 18: 16:Being present, not nothing 351:Concepts in metaphysics 331:Existentialist concepts 136:propositional function 244:Truth and Truthmakers 242:, D. M. Armstrong, 148:domain of discourse 56:. The philosopher, 311:What Is Something? 276:, Routledge, 1995 272:Bertrand Russell. 176:predicate variable 104:In predicate logic 358: 312: 260: 253: 247: 237: 231: 221: 215: 205: 199: 192: 142:by at least one 128:logical constant 82:Grammatically, " 366: 365: 361: 360: 359: 357: 356: 355: 321: 320: 310: 306: 269: 267:Further reading 264: 263: 254: 250: 238: 234: 222: 218: 206: 202: 198:(2011), p. 106. 193: 189: 184: 116:predicate logic 112: 106: 23: 17: 12: 11: 5: 364: 362: 354: 353: 348: 343: 338: 333: 323: 322: 319: 318: 305: 304:External links 302: 301: 300: 285: 268: 265: 262: 261: 259:(1975), p. 54. 248: 246:(2004), p. 89. 232: 216: 200: 186: 185: 183: 180: 108:Main article: 105: 102: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 363: 352: 349: 347: 344: 342: 339: 337: 334: 332: 329: 328: 326: 317: 313: 308: 307: 303: 298: 297:1-58617-087-2 294: 290: 286: 283: 282:0-415-07854-7 279: 275: 271: 270: 266: 258: 252: 249: 245: 241: 236: 233: 229: 225: 220: 217: 213: 209: 204: 201: 197: 191: 188: 181: 179: 177: 173: 169: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 129: 125: 121: 117: 111: 103: 101: 99: 98: 93: 89: 85: 80: 78: 74: 70: 65: 63: 59: 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 35: 31: 27: 22: 288: 273: 256: 251: 243: 239: 235: 227: 223: 219: 211: 203: 195: 194:Eli Hirsch, 190: 113: 95: 87: 83: 81: 71:philosopher 69:Neoplatonist 66: 61: 29: 25: 24: 152:predication 132:interpreted 62:necessarily 58:David Lewis 336:Perception 325:Categories 208:Iamblichus 182:References 124:quantifier 54:everything 19:See also: 240:See, e.g. 224:See, e.g. 140:satisfied 130:which is 84:something 38:existence 26:Something 346:Quantity 341:Ontology 160:relation 156:property 92:pronouns 88:anything 73:Porphyry 42:ontology 34:concepts 30:anything 316:YouTube 230:(2014). 164:asserts 138:can be 50:nothing 46:nothing 295:  280:  144:member 21:Entity 174:of a 172:value 168:scope 154:of a 146:of a 97:thing 293:ISBN 278:ISBN 126:, a 86:and 32:are 28:and 314:on 158:or 114:In 40:in 36:of 327:: 210:, 178:. 299:. 284:.

Index

Entity
concepts
existence
ontology
nothing
nothing
everything
David Lewis
Neoplatonist
Porphyry
why is there something rather than nothing at all?
pronouns
thing
Existential quantification
predicate logic
existential quantification
quantifier
logical constant
interpreted
propositional function
satisfied
member
domain of discourse
predication
property
relation
asserts
scope
value
predicate variable

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