Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


SEP home page
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Ordinary Objects

First published Thu Dec 8, 2011; substantive revision Mon Feb 17, 2025

Our everyday experiences present us with a wide array of objects: dogsand cats, tables and chairs, trees and their branches, and so forth.These sorts of ordinary objects may seem fairly unproblematic incomparison to entities like numbers, propositions, tropes, holes,points of space, and moments of time. Yet, on closer inspection, theyare at least as puzzling, if not more so.

This entry concerns a variety of problems that arise in connectionwith ordinary material objects. Proposed solutions to the problems, aswe shall see, almost invariably have one of three unpalatableconsequences. First, overpopulating the world with things that seemnot to be there, be it too many tables, or too many things in oneplace, or too many causes of the same events, or a plenitude ofobjects with extraordinary mereological or modal profiles. Second,unpalatable arbitrariness, be it arbitrariness concerning which kindsof objects there are, which objects do and don’t belong to agiven kind, which modal profiles are instantiated by which objects, orwhich objects together compose a further object. Third, unpalatableindeterminacies, be it indeterminate truth values, indeterminateidentities, ontic indeterminacy, or existential indeterminacy. Forthis reason, some view the problems as constituting a powerful casefor theelimination of the ordinary objects that give rise tothem in the first place.

Section 1 articulates a variety of ways of departing from an ordinary,conservative conception of which objects there are, either byeliminating ordinary objects or by permitting more objects than wewould ordinarily take to exist. Section 2 examines the puzzles andarguments that are meant to motivate these departures. Section 3examines some arguments against eliminative and permissive views.Finally, Section 4, turns from the question of which objects exist tothe question of which objects existfundamentally.

1. The Positions

1.1 Conservatism

We find ourselves naturally inclined to make certain judgments aboutwhich objects are before us in various situations. Looking at a pooltable just before the break, we are naturally inclined to judge thereto be sixteen pool balls on the table, perhaps various parts of theindividual balls (their top and bottom halves), and no othermacroscopic objects. Looking at my nightstand, I am naturally inclinedto judge there to be an alarm clock, a lamp, their various parts(lampshade, buttons, cords), and nothing else.

Conservative views are those according to which these sorts ofjudgments are by and large correct. Giving a precise characterizationof conservatism, or of ordinary objects, is no easy task. Veryroughly, ordinary objects are objects belonging to kinds that we arenaturally inclined to regard as having instances on the basis of ourperceptual experiences:dog,tree,table,and so forth. Extraordinary objects, by contrast, are macroscopicobjects belonging to kinds that we are not ordinarily inclined toregard as having instances. (More on these in§1.3.) And conservatism is roughly the view that there are just the ordinaryobjects and none of the extraordinary objects.[1]

Revisionary views about which objects there are are those that departin one way or another from conservatism. These include botheliminative views, on which there are fewer ordinary objects than arerecognized by conservatives, and permissive views, on which there areextraordinary objects that conservatives do not recognize. There is,however, some controversy about whether these departures fromconservatism actually deserve to be called ‘revisionary’.As we shall see in§3.1, many eliminativists and permissivists take their views to be entirelycompatible with common sense and ordinary belief.

Our target question—namely, which macroscopic objectsexist—may be distinguished from related but independentquestions concerning thenature of ordinary objects. Someviews about the natures of objects may seem to be at odds with commonsense, for instance, the view that ordinary objects can’tsurvive the loss of any of their parts, or that ordinary objects areall mind-dependent. But these views are entirely compatible withconservatism, as characterized above, because they do not (or at leastneed not) have any revisionary implications regardingwhichobjects there are at a given place and time. That said, questionsabout the nature of ordinary objects are intimately connected withquestions about which objects exist, insofar as certain views aboutthe nature of these objects (including those just mentioned) providethe resources for addressing some of the puzzles and arguments thatmotivate revisionary conceptions.

A few terminological preliminaries. ‘Object’ is used inits narrow sense, which applies only to individual material objectsand not to other sorts of entities like numbers or events.‘Part’ is used in its ordinary sense, on which it is nottrue—or at least not trivially true—that things are partsof themselves. And when the entry notes that some objects composesomething, or that they have a fusion, what is meant is that there issomething that has each of them as parts and every part of whichoverlaps at least one of them. The entry avoids the word‘sum’, but newcomers to this literature should bear inmind that it gets used in different ways: ‘sum of x and y’is sometimes used to meanobject that is composed of x and yand is other times used to meanobject that is composed of x and yand that has all of its parts essentially.[2]

1.2. Eliminativism

Eliminative views are those that deny the existence of some wide rangeof ordinary objects. (Denying merely that ordinary objects arefundamental is not by itself enough to qualify as an eliminativist;see§4 below.)

Some eliminativists accept nihilism, the thesis that no objects evercompose anything. In other words, every object is mereologicallysimple (i.e., partless). Together with the plausible assumption thatordinary objects (if they exist) are all composite objects, nihilismentails that there are no ordinary objects. Nihilists typically acceptthat there are countless microscopic objects: although there are“simples arranged dogwise” and “simples arrangedstatuewise”, there are no dogs or statues. But nihilism is alsocompatible with existence monism—the thesis that there is asingle, all-encompassing simple (the cosmos, a.k.a. “theblobject”)—as well as the extreme nihilist thesis thatthere are no objects whatsoever.[3]

Since many of the arguments for eliminativism actually fall short ofestablishing that composition never occurs, it is also open toeliminativists to reject nihilism and accept certain classes ofcomposites. Many eliminativists make an exception for persons andother organisms. Some, for instance, accept organicism, the thesisthat some objects compose something just in case the activities ofthose objects constitute a life. In other words, organisms are theonly composite objects.[4]

The motivations for making an exception for organisms vary. VanInwagen (1990: Ch. 12) accepts organicism on the grounds that ityields the best answer to the special composition question(“under what conditions do some objects composesomething?”), one that allows for one’s own existence andphysicality, while at the same time escaping various problems thatarise for competing answers. Merricks (2001: Ch. 4) argues thatpersons and some other composites must be recognized on account oftheir nonredundant causal powers. Making such exceptions naturallygives rise to concerns about the stability of the resulting positions,either because the reasoning behind allowing the exceptions threatensto generalize to all ordinary objects or because the arguments foreliminating ordinary objects threaten to generalize to the objects onewishes to permit.[5]

It is also open to eliminativists to adopt non-nihilistic views thatare fairly liberal about composition, allowing that composition occursat least as often as we ordinarily suppose (if not more so). PeterUnger is one such non-nihilistic eliminativist:

There is nothing in these arguments [for eliminativism] to deny theidea, common enough, that there are physical objects with a diametergreater than four feet and less than five. Indeed, the exhibited[arguments] allow us still to maintain that there are physical objectsof a variety of shapes and sizes, and with various particular spatialrelations and velocities with respect to each other. It is simply thatno such objects will be ordinary things; none are stones or planets orpieces of furniture. (1979b: 150)

While Unger does use the label ‘nihilism’ for his view, heis not a nihilist in our sense because he affirms that there is ahighly visible composite object occupying the exact location where wetake the table to be. He is, however, an eliminativist insofar as hedenies that that object is a table.[6]

1.3 Permissivism

Permissive views are those according to which there are wide swathesof extraordinary objects.

Universalism is the permissivist thesis that composition isunrestricted: for any objects, there is a single object that iscomposed of those objects. What universalism does not tell us is whichkinds of objects there are. Whenever there are some atomsarranged turkeywise, universalism entails that there issomeobject that they compose. But it remains open to universalists (likethe aforementioned non-nihilistic eliminativists) to deny that thiscomposite is a turkey. However, assuming that there are such objectsas turkeys, trout, and their front and back halves, universalism willentail that there are trout-turkeys, where a trout-turkey is a singleobject composed of the undetached front half of a trout and theundetached back half of a turkey. These are objects that have bothfins and feathers and whose finned parts may be a good distance fromtheir feathered parts.[7]

Diachronic universalism is the permissivist thesis that, for any timesand any function from those times to sets of objects that exist atthose times, there is an object that exists at just those times andhas exactly those parts at those times. Roughly: there is an objectcorresponding to every filled region of spacetime. So, assuming thatyour kitchen table and living room table both exist, there also existsa klable: an object that’s entirely made up of your kitchentable every day from midnight till noon and is entirely made up ofyour living room table from noon till midnight. This is an objectthat, twice a day, instantly and imperceptibly shifts its location.[8]

Some accept even more plenitudinous forms of permissivism.Formulations vary, but the rough idea is that, so long as theempirical facts don’t rule out there being an object with agiven modal property in a given location, then there is an object inthat location with that modal property. When there is a red car parkedin the garage, the empirical facts (e.g., that there is nothing bluethere) do rule out there being an object in the exact location of thecar that is necessarily blue. But they do not rule out there being anobject colocated with the car that is inside the garage as a matter ofmetaphysical necessity (an “incar”) and that would ceaseto exist if the car were to leave the garage.[9]

One further way of being a permissivist is by permitting a multitudeofparts of ordinary objects that we do not naturally judgethem to have. For instance, one might hold that, in addition toordinary parts like arms and legs, you have extraordinary parts likeleg complements, where your left-leg complement is an object made upof all of you except for your left leg. Together with some naturalassumptions (e.g., about regions of space), leg complements and alegion of other extraordinary parts will be delivered by the doctrineof arbitrary undetached parts—or DAUP—the thesis that forany material object o, if r is the region of space occupied by o, andif r′ is an occupiable sub-region of r, then there exists amaterial object that exactly occupies r′ and which is part of o.(Roughly: for every region of space within the boundaries of a given aobject, that object has a part that exactly fills that region.)[10]

2. Against Conservative Ontologies

2.1 Sorites Arguments

Sorites arguments proceed from a premise to the effect that minutedifferences cannot make a difference with respect to whether someproperty F (or kind K) is instantiated to the conclusion that nothing(or everything) is F (or a K). Here is a sorites argument for theelimination of stones:

(SR1)
Every stone is composed of a finite number of atoms.
(SR2)
It is impossible for something composed of fewer than two atoms tobe a stone.
(SR3)
For any number n, if it is impossible for an object composed of natoms to be a stone, then it is impossible for an object composed ofn+1 atoms to be a stone.
(SR4)
So, there are no stones.

Premises SR2 and SR3 together entail that, for any finite number ofatoms, nothing made up of that many atoms is a stone. But this,together with SR1, entails that there are no stones.[11]

Similar arguments may be given for the elimination of individualordinary objects. One can construct a sorites series of contiguousbits of matter, running from a bit of matter, mk, at thepeak of Kilimanjaro to a bit of matter, mp, in thesurrounding plains. From the sorites premise that a bit of matterthat’s n inches along the path from mp tomk is part of Kilimanjaro iff a bit of matter that’sn+1 inches along the path is part of Kilimanjaro (for any number n),together with the fact that mp is not part of Kilimanjaro,we reach the absurd conclusion that mk isn’t part ofKilimanjaro. So, by reductio, we may conclude that Kilimanjaro doesnot exist.[12]

Why accept SR3? Imagine a series of cases, beginning with a caseinvolving a single atom and terminating with a case involving whatwould seem to be a paradigm stone, where each case differs from thepreceding case only by the addition of a single atom. It seems highlyimplausible that there should be adjacent cases in any such serieswhere there is a stone in one case but not in the other. Rejecting SR3would look to commit one to just such a sharp cut-off.

But one can deny that SR3 is true without accepting that there is asharp transition from stones to non-stones in such series, that is,without accepting that there is some specific object in the seriesthat definitely is a stone and whose successor definitely is not astone. For one may instead hold that there is a range of cases inwhich it is vague whether the object in question is a stone.[13]

Here is an illustration of how that sort of strategy might go. Let Sbe some object in the series that clearly seems to be a stone, let NSbe an object that clearly seems to be a non-stone, and let BS be anobject that seems to be a borderline case of being a stone. One mightsuggest that ‘stone’ is vague as a result of there being arange of candidate precise meanings (or“precisifications”) for the word ‘stone’,

(i)
all of which apply to S,
(ii)
none of which apply to NS,
(iii)
some but not all of which apply to BS, and
(iv)
none of which is definitely the meaning of‘stone’.

‘S is a stone’ is true because S falls under all of theseprecisifications of ‘stone’. ‘NS is a stone’is false because NS doesn’t fall under any of them. And‘BS is a stone’ is neither true nor false because BS fallsunder some but not all of the precisifications. And then SR3 itselfturns out to be false: onevery precisification of‘stone’, there is some object in the series such that itbut not its successor falls under that precisification. (This issometimes known as a “supervaluationist” account.)

Defenders of sorites arguments often complain that this line ofresponse still commits one tosome “sharp statustransition”, for instance, a sharp transition from a case inwhich ‘there is a stone’ is true to a case in which it isneither true nor false.[14]

2.2 The Argument from Vagueness

It is natural to suppose that objects sometimes do, and other times donot, compose a further object. When a hammer head is firmly affixed toa handle, they compose something, namely, a hammer. When they’reon opposite ends of the room, they don’t compose anything. Thefollowing argument—known as “the argument fromvagueness”—purports to show that this natural assumptionis mistaken.

(AV1)
If some pluralities of objects compose something and others donot, then it is possible for there to be a sorites series forcomposition.
(AV2)
Any such sorites series must contain either an exact cut-off orborderline cases of composition.
(AV3)
There cannot be exact cut-offs in such sorites series.
(AV4)
There cannot be borderline cases of composition.
(AV5)
So, either every plurality of objects composes something or nonedo.

If the argument is sound then either universalism or nihilism must becorrect, though which of them is correct would have to be decided onindependent grounds.[15]

A sorites series for composition is a series of cases running from acase in which composition doesn’t occur to a case in whichcomposition does occur, where adjacent cases are extremely similar inall of the respects that one would ordinarily take to be relevant towhether composition occurs (e.g., the spatial and causal relationsamong the objects in question). Understood in this way, AV1 should beunobjectionable. If it’s true that the handle and head composesomething only once the hammer is assembled, then a moment-by-momentseries of cases running from the beginning to the end of the assemblyof the hammer would be just such a series. Premise AV2 looks trivial:any such series obviously must containsome transition fromcomposition not occurring to composition occurring, and there eitherwill or won’t be a determinate fact of the matter about whereexactly that transition occurs in any given series.

AV3 is plausible as well. If composition occurs in one case but not inanother, then surely there must be some explanation for why that is.In other words, the facts about composition are not“brute”. Yet the sorts of differences that one finds amongadjacent cases in a sorites series for composition—for instance,that the handle and head are a fraction of a centimeter closertogether in the one than in the other—can’t plausiblyexplain why composition occurs in one case but not in the other.[16]

Certain sorts of eliminativists are well positioned to resist AV3without having to accept that compositional facts are brute. Suppose,for instance, that one accepts a view on which conscious beings arethe only composite objects. Such eliminativists will deny that thereis a sorites series for composition running from the beginning to theend of the assembly process, since they will deny that anything iscomposed of the handle and head (or that thereare a handleand head) even at the end of the series. Every sorites series forcomposition, by their lights, will have to run from a case involving aconscious being to one that doesn’t. And assuming that thatthere can’t be borderline cases of consciousness, every suchseries will contain a sharp cut-off with respect to the presence ofthe additional subject of consciousness. This, in turn, is poised toexplain why composition occurs in the one case but not the other.[17]

Why, though, should anyone accept AV4? On the face of it, it seemsjust as clear that there can be borderline cases of composition (e.g.,when the hammer head is just beginning to be affixed to the handle) asit is that there can be borderline cases of redness and baldness. Thisis not, however, “just another sorites,” to be blocked inwhichever way one blocks the sorites arguments in §2.1.That’s because questions about when composition occurs look tobe intimately bound up with questions about how many objects exist.This suggests the following line of argument in defense of AV4, noanalogue of which is available for other sorts of sorites arguments.[18]

(AV6)
If there can be borderline cases of composition, then it can beindeterminate how many objects exist.
(AV7)
It cannot be indeterminate how many objects exist.
(AV4)
So, there cannot be borderline cases of composition.

To see the motivation for AV6, notice that if the handle and head docompose something then there are three things: the handle, the head,and a hammer. If they don’t, then there are only two things: thehandle and head. And if it is vague whether they do, then it will bevague whether there are two things or three. As for AV7, notice thatone can specify how many objects there are using what would seem to beentirely precise vocabulary. For any finite number, one can produce a“numerical sentence” saying that there are exactly thatmany concrete objects. Here, for instance, is the numerical sentencefor two: ‘∃x∃y(x≠y & Cx & Cy &∀z(Cz→(x=z ∨ y=z)))’. (The restriction toconcreta ensures that numerical sentences aren’t trivially falsesimply on account of there being infinitely many numbers, sets, and soforth.) And since these numerical sentences contain no vaguevocabulary, it would seem to follow that it cannot be indeterminatehow many objects there are.

AV6 can be resisted by denying that composition affects the number ofobjects in the way suggested. For instance, one might contend thateven before the handle and head definitely come to compose something,there exists an object—a“proto-hammer”—located in the region that the two ofthem jointly occupy. The proto-hammer definitely exists, but it is aborderline case of composition: it is indeterminate whether the handleand head compose the proto-hammer or whether they instead composenothing at all (in which case the proto-hammer has no parts).[19]

Alternatively, one might resist AV7 by pinning the vagueness on thequantifiers in the numerical sentence. After all, what seems to bevague is whether the handle and head areeverything thatthere is and whetherthere issomething other thanthe handle and head. But it is difficult to see how the quantifierscan be vague and, in particular, how their vagueness could beaccounted for on the sort of standard, precisificational account ofvagueness discussed in§2.1.[20]

2.3 Material Constitution

Ordinary objects are constituted by, or made up out of, aggregates ofmatter. A gold ring is constituted by a certain piece of gold. Claystatues are constituted by pieces of clay. We are naturally inclinedto regard the statue and the piece of clay as being one and the sameobject, an object that simply belongs to multiple kinds(statue andpiece of clay).

The puzzles of material constitution put pressure on this naturalinclination. Here is one such puzzle. Let ‘Athena’ name acertain clay statue and let ‘Piece’ name the piece of claythat constitutes it. What is puzzling is that all of the followingseem true:

(MC1)
Athena exists and Piece exists.
(MC2)
If Athena exists and Piece exists, then Athena = Piece.
(MC3)
Athena has different properties from Piece.
(MC4)
If Athena has different properties from Piece, then Athena ≠Piece.

The motivation behind MC2 is that Athena seemingly has exactly thesame location and exactly the same parts as Piece. So‘Athena’ and ‘Piece’ are plausibly justdifferent names for the same thing. The motivation behind MC3 is thatPiece and Athena seem to have different modal properties: Piece isable to survive being flattened and Athena isn’t. MC4 followsfrom the Principle of the Indiscernibility of Identicals (a.k.a.Leibniz’s Law): ∀x∀y(x=y → ∀P(Px iffPy)). In other words, if x and y are identical, then they had betterhave all the same properties. After all, if they are identical, thenthere is onlyone thing there to have or lack any given property.[21]

The puzzles are sometimes taken to motivate eliminativism, sinceeliminativists can simply deny MC1: there are no statues (and perhapsno pieces of clay either).[22]

More often, however, the puzzles are taken to motivate constitutionalpluralism, the thesis that ordinary objects are typically, if notalways, distinct from the aggregates of matter that constitute them.(‘Typically’ because, in rare cases in which the ordinaryobject and the aggregate come into existence at the same time andcease to exist at the same time, some pluralists will take theordinary object to be identical to the aggregate.) Pluralists rejectMC2: clay statues are not identical to the pieces of clay thatconstitute them. Pluralists may deny that having the same parts at agiven time suffices for identity, or they may instead deny that thestatue and the piece of clay have all of the same parts.[23]

One of the main problems facing the pluralist solution is thegrounding problem: the modal differences between Athena and Piece(e.g., that the one but not the other can survive being flattened)seem to stand in need of explanation and yet there seems to be nofurther difference between them that is poised to explain, or ground,these differences.[24]

Defenders of the pluralist response to these puzzles may, by similarreasoning, be led to accept that, in special cases, two objects of thesame kind can coincide. Suppose, for instance, that we have afantastically big net (Thin) with very thin netting. We then roll itup into a long rope, and we weave that rope into a smaller net (Thick)with a thicker weave. Since the nets intuitively have different modalproperties—Thin, but not Thick, can survive the unraveling ofthe thicker net—the same sort of reasoning that leads one toreject MC2 underwrites an argument that the nets are not identical. Inother words, there are two exactly colocated objects, both of whichare nets.[25]

Constitutional monists, according to whom Athena is identical toPiece, will deny MC3. There are various ways of developing the monistresponse. First, one might insist that both Athena and Piece (which,on this view, are identical) can survive flattening: upon flattening,Athena ceases to be a statue, but does not cease to exist. We can callthose who opt for this approach ‘phasalists’, since theytakebeing a statue to be a temporary phase that Piece (i.e.,Athena) is passing through.[26]

Alternatively, monists might deny that Piece (i.e., Athena) cansurvive being flattened. When Piece is flattened, Piece ceases toexist, at which point an entirely new piece of clay (composed of thesame atoms) comes into existence. This strategy is sometimes called“the doctrine of dominant kinds”, since the idea is thatwhen an object belongs to multiple kinds, the object has thepersistence conditions associated with whichever of the kinds“dominates” the others. Becausestatue dominatespiece, Piece is a statue essentially, and therefore cannotsurvive ceasing to be statue-shaped.[27]

Finally, monists might agree that Piece is able to survive beingflattened and that Athena is not able to survive being flattened, andyet deny that Athena and Piece have different properties. How can thatbe? On one version of this approach (often associated with counterparttheory), the idea is that ‘is able to survive beingflattened’ is context-sensitive, expressing one property whenaffixed to ‘Athena’ and another when affixed to‘Piece’. On another, the idea is that ‘is able tosurvive being flattened’ does not express a property at all.Either way, we do not end up with any one property that Piece has butAthena lacks.[28]

2.4 Indeterminate Identity

A wooden ship is constructed and christened ‘Theseus II’.As planks come loose over the years, they are discarded and replaced.After three hundred years, the last of the original planks isreplaced. Call the resulting ship ‘the mended ship’. Thedescendants of the original owners have been collecting the discardedoriginal planks, and—three hundred years after thechristening—they obtain the last of them and construct a shipthat is indistinguishable from the original. Call the resulting ship‘the reconstructed ship’. Which, if either, of these twoships is identical to Theseus II? It is natural to suppose that thereis no fact of the matter: it is indeterminate which of the two shipsis Theseus II.

However, there arguably can never be indeterminate cases ofidentity:

(ST1)
Suppose that it is indeterminate whether Theseus II = the mendedship.
(ST2)
If so, then Theseus II has the property of being indeterminatelyidentical to the mended ship.
(ST3)
The mended ship does not have the property of beingindeterminately identical to the mended ship.
(ST4)
If Theseus II has this property and the mended ship lacks thisproperty, then Theseus II ≠ the mended ship.
(ST5)
If Theseus II ≠ the mended ship, then it isn’tindeterminate whether Theseus II = the mended ship.
(ST6)
So (by reductio), it isn’t indeterminate whether Theseus II= the mended ship.

ST2 relies on two seemingly innocuous inferences: (a) from its beingindeterminate whether Theseus II is identical to the mended ship toTheseus II’s being indeterminately identical to the mended shipand (b) from there to Theseus II’s having the property of beingindeterminately identical to the mended ship. ST3 seems trivial aswell: the mended ship is definitely self-identical, so it does notitself have this property. ST4 looks to be an immediate consequence ofLeibniz’s Law: if Theseus II and the mended ship differ withrespect to even one property, then they are distinct. ST5 is trivial:if they’re not identical, then it isn’t indeterminatewhether they are identical.[29]

Eliminativists may go on to argue from ST6 to the conclusion thatthere are no ships, as follows. If indeed it isn’t indeterminatewhether Theseus II is the mended ship, then there would seem to befive options:

(i)
Theseus II is identical only to the mended ship.
(ii)
Theseus II is identical only to the reconstructed ship.
(iii)
Theseus II is identical both to the mended ship and to thereconstructed ship.
(iv)
Theseus II is neither ship; it has ceased to exist.
(v)
Theseus II never existed in the first place; there are noships.

Options (i) and (ii) seem intolerably arbitrary, since the mended shipand reconstructed ship seem to have equal claim to being Theseus II.Option (iii) is out as well. If Theseus II is identical to both ships,then (by the transitivity of identity) they must be identical to oneanother; but they cannot be identical because they have differentproperties (e.g., the one but not the other is composed of theoriginal planks). Option (iv) is problematic as well. The history ofmaintenance by itself would have sufficed for the persistence ofTheseus II; the preservation and reassembly of the original parts byitself would likewise have sufficed for the persistence of Theseus II;and here we have managed to secure both. As Parfit (1971: 5) wouldsay, “How could a double success be a failure?” Thus, weget (v) from argument by elimination. Fitting.[30]

Some respond to the argument by maintaining that it is indeterminatewhich of various objects ‘Theseus II’ picks out. Ifthat’s right, then ST2 is arguably false. One cannot infer theexistence of an individual who is indeterminately identical to Suefrom the fact that it is indeterminate whether Sue (or rather Morgan)is Harry’s best friend. Analogously, one cannot infer theexistence of an individual that is indeterminately identical to themended ship from the fact that it is indeterminate whether Theseus IIis the mended ship.[31]

The prima facie problem with this response is that there do not seemto be multiple objects such that it’s indeterminate which one‘Theseus II’ picks out. After all, when ‘TheseusII’ was first introduced, there was only one ship around toreceive the name! One can address this problem by maintaining that,despite appearances, two ships were present at the christening: onethat would later be composed of entirely different planks and anotherthat would later be reassembled from a pile of discarded planks. Whatis indeterminate is which of these two temporarily colocated ships waschristened ‘Theseus II’.[32]

Other responses are available. One might deny ST2 on the grounds thatthere is no such property as the property of being indeterminatelyidentical to Theseus II. One might deny ST3, affirming that the mendedship is indeterminately identical to the mended ship. One might denyST4 by denying that the distinctness of Theseus II and the mended shipcan be inferred from the fact that they do not share the indicatedproperty. Or one might embrace option (iv), on the (stage-theoretic)grounds that the ship that existed at the time of the christening isnot identical to any ship that exists at any earlier or later time.[33]

2.5 Arbitrariness Arguments

Arguments from arbitrariness turn on the observation that there wouldseem to be no ontologically significant difference between certainordinary and extraordinary objects, that is, no difference betweenthem that can account for why there would be things of the one kindbut not the other. Here is an example (drawn from Hawthorne 2006:vii):

(AR1)
There are islands.
(AR2)
There is no ontologically significant difference between islandsand incars.
(AR3)
If there is no ontologically significant difference betweenislands and incars, then: if there are islands then there areincars.
(AR4)
So, there are incars.

The idea behind AR2 is that islands and incars (see§1.3) would seem to be objects of broadly the same sort, namely, objectsthat go out of existence simply by virtue of changing theirorientation with respect to some other thing (the water level in theone case, the garage in the other), without their constitutive matterundergoing any intrinsic change. The idea behind AR3 is that, if theretruly are islands but no incars, then this is something that wouldseem to stand in need of explanation: there would have to be somethingin virtue of which it’s the case. To think otherwise would be totake the facts about what exists to be arbitrary in a way that theyplausibly are not.

Similar arguments may be used to establish the existence of legcomplements (on the grounds that there’s no ontologicallysignificant difference between them and legs) and trout-turkeys (onthe grounds that there’s no ontologically significant differencebetween them and scattered objects like solar systems).[34]

Eliminativists may of course resist the argument by denying AR1.[35]

The argument may also be resisted by denying AR2 and identifying someontologically significant difference between islands and incars. Forinstance, a certain sort of anti-realist will say that which objectsthere are is largely determined by which objects we take there to be.Accordingly, the very fact that we take there to be islands but notincars marks an ontologically significant difference between them.Alternatively, one may attempt to identify an ontologicallysignificant difference between the ordinary and extraordinary objectswithout endorsing anti-realism. In the case at hand, one might resistAR2 by insisting that islands have importantly different persistenceconditions from incars. Incars are meant to cease to exist when theirmatter ceases to be inside a garage. But islands, contra hypothesis,do not cease to exist when they are completely submerged; they merelycease to be islands.[36]

How about AR3? Part of why it seems arbitrary to countenance islandsbut not incars is that one would seem to be privileging islands overincars by virtue of taking them to exist. For this reason, proponentsof certain deflationary ontological views are well positioned to denyAR3. Relativists, for instance, may maintain that islands exist andincars do not exist—relative to our conceptual scheme, that is.Relative to other, equally good schemes, incars exist and islands donot. Quantifier variantists, who maintain that there are counterpartsof our quantifiers that are on a par with ours and that range overthings that do not exist—but rather exist*—may maintainthat islands exist but do not exist* while incars exist* but do notexist. On such views, islands and incars receive a uniform treatmentat bottom; islands are not getting any sort of “specialtreatment” that cries out for explanation.[37]

2.6 Debunking Arguments

We encounter some atoms arranged treewise and some atoms arrangeddogwise, and we naturally take there to be a dog and a tree. But thereare different ways we might have carved up such a situation intoobjects. Instead of taking there to be a tree there, we might insteadhave taken there to be a trog: a partly furry, partly wooden objectcomposed of the dog and the tree-trunk.

Why, though, do we naturally take there to trees rather than trogs?Plausibly, this is largely the result of various biological andcultural contingencies. If so, then there arguably is little reason toexpect that our beliefs about which objects there are would be evenapproximately correct. This realization, in turn, is meant to debunkour beliefs about which objects there are:

(DK1)
There is no explanatory connection between how we believe theworld to be divided up into objects the how the world actually isdivided up into objects.
(DK2)
If so, then it would be a coincidence if our object beliefs turnedout to be correct.
(DK3)
If it would be a coincidence if our object beliefs turned out tobe correct, then we shouldn’t believe that there are trees.
(DK4)
So, we shouldn’t believe that there are trees.

The idea behind DK1 is that we are inclined to believe in trees ratherthan trogs largely because prevailing conventions in the communitieswe were born into generally prohibit treating some things as the partsof a single object unless they are connected or in some other wayunified. These conventions themselves likely trace back to an innatetendency to perceive only certain arrays of qualities as being borneby a single object and its being adaptive for creatures like us to soperceive the world. But the facts about which distributions of atomsdo compose something, or about which arrays of qualities truly areborne by a single object, have no role to play in explaining why thisis adaptive. Thus, it would seem that we divide up the world intoobjects the way that we do for reasons having nothing at all to dowith how the world actually is divided up.

The idea behind DK2 is that if there truly is this sort of disconnectbetween the object facts and the factors that lead us to our objectbeliefs, then it could only be a lucky coincidence if those factorsled us to beliefs that lined up with the object facts. And the ideabehind DK3 is that since we have no rational grounds for believingthat we got lucky, we shouldn’t believe that we did, in whichcase we should suspend our beliefs about which objects there are and,in particular, our belief that there are trees.[38]

Such debunking arguments fall short of establishing that eliminativismis true or that conservatism is false. But, if successful, they dolend powerful support to eliminativism, by effectively neutralizingany reasons we might take ourselves to have for accepting conservatismor for wanting to resist the arguments for eliminativism.[39]

The arguments also lend indirect support to permissivism, insofar aspermissivists are well positioned to deny DK2. By permissivist lights,having accurate beliefs about which kinds of objects there are is atrivial accomplishment (not a coincidence), since there are objectsanswering to virtually every way that we might have perceptually andconceptually divided up a situation into objects. The ordinary andextraordinary objects are all already out there waiting to be noticed;all that our conventions do is determine which ones are selected for attention.[40]

Deflationists also seem well positioned to deny DK2. Relativists willsay that, while we could easily have divided up the world differently,we could not easily had divided up the world incorrectly. For had wedivided the world into trogs rather than trees, we would then have hada different conceptual scheme, and we would have correctly believedthat trogs exist-relative-to-that-scheme. Quantifier variantists willsay that, had we divided the world into trogs but not trees, we wouldthen have correctly believed that trogs exist*.[41]

Alternatively, one might try to resist DK1 by identifying anexplanatory connection between the way the world is divided up and ourbeliefs about how it is divided up. For instance, one might say thatwe have the object beliefs that we do as a result of intelligentdesign: God, wanting us to have largely accurate beliefs, arranged forus to have experiences that represent trees and not trogs. Or onemight take a rationalist line, according to which, through somecapacity for rational insight, we intellectually apprehend relevantfacts about which objects together compose something. Or one might optfor an anti-realist line and insist that there is a mind-to-worldexplanatory connection: object beliefs determine the object facts andare therefore an excellent guide to which kinds exist.[42]

2.7 Overdetermination Arguments

Overdetermination arguments aim to establish that ordinary objects ofvarious kinds do not exist, by way of showing that there is nodistinctive causal work for them to do. Here is one such argument:

(OD1)
Every event caused by a baseball is caused by atoms arrangedbaseballwise.
(OD2)
No event caused by atoms arranged baseballwise is caused by abaseball.
(OD3)
So, no events are caused by baseballs.
(OD4)
If no events are caused by baseballs, then baseballs do notexist.
(OD5)
So, baseballs do not exist.[43]

For the purposes of this argument, ‘atoms’ may beunderstood as a placeholder for whichever microscopic objects or stufffeature in the best microphysical explanations of observable reality.These may turn out to be the composite atoms of chemistry, they may bemereological simples, or they may even be a nonparticulate“quantum froth”.

One could resist OD1 by maintaining that some things that are causedby baseballs are not also caused by their atoms. On one way ofdeveloping this line of response, baseballs “trump” theiratoms: atoms arranged baseballwise can’t collectively causeanything to happen so long as they’re parts of the baseball. Onanother, there is a division of causal labor: baseballs cause eventsinvolving macroscopic items like the shattering of windows, whiletheir atoms cause events involving microscopic items like thescatterings of atoms arranged windowwise. Both strategies, however,look to be in tension with the plausible claim that there is acomplete causal explanation for every physical event wholly in termsof microphysical items. Moreover, this line of response would seem torequire that baseballs have emergent properties—causallyefficacious properties that cannot be accounted for in terms of theproperties of their atomic parts—which seems implausible.[44]

OD2 can be motivated as follows:

(OD6)
If an event is caused by a baseball and by atoms arrangedbaseballwise, then the event is overdetermined by the baseball andatoms arranged baseballwise.
(OD7)
No event is overdetermined by a baseball and atoms arrangedbaseballwise.
(OD2)
So, no event caused by atoms arranged baseballwise is caused by abaseball.

Let us say that an event e is overdetermined by o1 ando2 just in case:

(i)
o1 causese,
(ii)
o2 causese,
(iii)
o1 is not causally relevant too2’s causinge,
(iv)
o2 is not causally relevant too1’s causinge, and
(v)
o1o2.

This can be taken as a stipulation about how‘overdetermined’ is to be understood in the argument, thuspreempting nebulous debates about whether satisfying these fiveconditions suffices for “real” or “genuine”overdetermination. To say that o1 is causally relevant too2’s causing e is to say that o1 entersinto the explanation of how o2 causes e to occur in one ofthe following ways: by causing o2 to cause e, by beingcaused by o2 to cause e, by jointly causing e together witho2, or—where o2 is a plurality ofobjects—by being one of them.[45]

Can OD6 be resisted? The idea would have to be that, although someevents are caused both by atoms and by baseballs composed of thoseatoms, those events are not overdetermined (in the indicated sense).But if they are not overdetermined, then which of the five conditionsfor overdetermination do the baseball and the atoms fail to meet? Thisline of response takes for granted that (i) and (ii) are satisfied.And it is extremely plausible that (iii) and (iv) would be satisfiedas well. However it is that baseballs “get in on theaction”, it isn’t by entering into the causal explanationofhow the atoms manage to cause things. Baseballsdon’t cause their atoms to shatter windows, nor do their atomscause them to shatter windows. So those who would deny OD6 will needto deny that condition (v) is satisfied, by taking the baseball to beidentical to the atoms. See§3.3 below for discussion of the thesis that objects are identical totheir various parts.

Why accept OD7? In certain cases, overdetermination strikes us as anovert violation of Ockham’s Razor: do not multiply entitiesbeyond necessity. But given the intimate connection between baseballsand their atoms, it is natural to feel that even if these do count ascases of overdetermination (in the indicated sense), this isn’tan especially objectionable sort of overdetermination. One may thenattempt to resist OD7 by articulating a further condition whichdistinguishes problematic from unproblematic cases ofoverdetermination. For instance, one might hold that overdeterminationby o1 and o2 is unproblematic so long aso1 and o2 aren’t entirely independent.[46]

Even supposing, however, that the line between objectionable andunobjectionable sorts of overdetermination can be drawn in somesatisfactory way, there would still be pressure to accept OD7. Weshould accept that something other than the atoms shatters the windowonly if we have good reason to believe in this something. But there isnoexplanatory need to posit baseballs, since there is acomplete causal explanation for all of the relevant events wholly interms of the activities of the atoms. And the debunking arguments in§2.6 purport to show that our ordinary perceptual reasons for believing inbaseballs are no good. So we would seem to have no good reason at allto accept that there are baseballs, in which case we ought to accept OD7.[47]

Premise OD4 can be motivated in much the same way as OD7. If baseballsdon’t cause anything to happen, then we have no good reason tobelieve in them, in which case we should accept OD4. One might alsogive a more direct defense of OD4 by appealing to the controversialEleatic Principle (a.k.a. Alexander’s Dictum), according towhich everything that exists has causal powers. Together with theplausible assumption that if baseballs don’t cause anythingit’s because theycan’t cause anything, theEleatic Principle entails OD4.[48]

2.8 The Problem of the Many

The office appears to contain a single wooden desk. The desk isconstituted by a single hunk of wood whose surface forms a sharpboundary with the environment, without even a single cellulosemolecule coming loose from the others. Call this hunk of wood‘Woodrow’. Now consider the object consisting of all ofWoodrow’s parts except for a single cellulose molecule,‘Molly’, making up part of Woodrow’s surface. Callthis ever-so-slightly smaller hunk of wood‘Woodrow-minus’. Because Woodrow-minus is extraordinarilysimilar to Woodrow, there is considerable pressure to accept thatWoodrow-minus is a desk as well. This, in short, is the problem of themany.

(PM1)
Woodrow is a desk iff Woodrow-minus is a desk.
(PM2)
If so, then it is not the case that there is exactly one desk inthe office.
(PM3)
There is exactly one desk in the office.

PM1 and PM2 straightforwardly entail that PM3 is false; one of theseclaims has to go.[49]

PM1 is plausible. Woodrow-minus seems to have everything that it takesto be a desk: it looks like a desk, it’s shaped like a desk,it’s got a flat writing surface, and so forth. Accordingly, itseems arbitrary to suppose that Woodrow but not Woodrow-minus is adesk. Moreover, if Molly were removed, Woodrow-minus would certainlythen be a desk. But since Woodrow-minus doesn’t itself undergoany interesting change when Molly is removed (after all, Mollyisn’t evenpart of Woodrow-minus), it stands to reasonthat Woodrow-minus must likewise be a desk even while Molly isattached to it.

One might deny PM1 on the grounds that being a desk is a“maximal” property, that is, a property of an object thatcannot be shared by large parts of that object. Since Woodrow is adesk, and since Woodrow-minus is a large part of Woodrow,Woodrow-minus is not a desk.[50]

But this style of response can be rendered unavailable by introducingan element of vagueness into our story. Suppose now that Molly hasbegun to come loose from the other molecules, in such a way that it isnaturally described as being a borderline part of the desk in theoffice. Let Woodrow-plus be the aggregate of cellulose molecules thatdefinitely has Molly as a part. PM1 can then be replaced withPM1′:

(PM1′)
Woodrow-plus is a desk iff Woodrow-minus is a desk.

Woodrow-plus and Woodrow-minus each seem to have everything that ittakes to be a desk, and neither seems to be a better candidate thanthe other for being a desk. PM2 would then be replaced withPM2′:

(PM2′)
If Woodrow-plus is a desk iff Woodrow-minus is a desk, then: it isnot the case that there is exactly one desk in the office.[51]

PM1′ can be resisted by proponents of the supervaluationiststrategy sketched in§2.1 above. The vague term ‘desk’ has multipleprecisifications, some of which apply to Woodrow-plus, some of whichapply to Woodrow-minus, butnone of which applies to both.Accordingly, PM1′ is false on some precisifications, andtherefore is not true simpliciter.[52]

Constitutional pluralists can deny both PM2 and PM2′. Regardingthe original story, they may insist that neither Woodrow norWoodrow-minus is a desk. Each is a mere hunk of wood, and no mere hunkof wood is a desk. Rather, there is exactly one desk, it isconstituted by Woodrow, and while Woodrow-minus would constitute thatdesk if Molly were removed, as things stand it constitutes nothing atall. Regarding the revised story, pluralists may again say that thereis exactly one desk, neither Woodrow-plus nor Woodrow-minus is a desk,and it is simply indeterminate whether it is Woodrow-plus orWoodrow-minus that constitutes that desk. In that case, PM2′ isfalse. It’s true that each is a desk iff the otheris—since neither is a desk—but it doesn’t followthat there’s more than one or fewer than one desk.[53]

Finally, one might deny PM3, either by accepting an eliminative viewon which there is no desk in the office or by accepting a permissiveview on which there is more than one desk in the office. Proponents ofthe latter response will end up committed to far more than two desks,however. By parity of reason, there will also be a desk composed ofall of the cellulose molecules except Nelly (≠ Molly). Likewise forOllie. And so on. So there will be at least as many desks as there arecellulose molecules on the surface of the desk.[54]

3. Against Revisionary Ontologies

3.1 Arguments from Counterexamples

Universalism seems to conflict with our intuitive judgment that thefront halves of trout and the back halves of turkeys do not composeanything. Put another way, universalism seems to be open to fairlyobvious counterexamples. Here is an argument from counterexamplesagainst universalism:

(CX1)
If universalism is true, then there are trout-turkeys.
(CX2)
There are no trout-turkeys.
(CX3)
So universalism is false.

Similar arguments may be lodged against other revisionary theses. Thevarious forms of eliminativism wrongly imply that there are nostatues; plenitudinism wrongly implies that there are incars; thedoctrine of arbitrary undetached parts wrongly implies that there areleg complements; and so forth.[55]

Compatibilist accounts of the apparent counterexamples take thetargeted revisionary views to be entirely compatible with theintuitions or beliefs that are meant to motivate CX2. Such accountsoften take the form of assimilating recalcitrant ordinary utterancesto some familiar linguistic phenomenon that is known to be potentiallymisleading. For instance, when an ordinary speaker looks in the fridgeand says ‘there’s no beer’, she obviouslydoesn’t mean to be saying that there is no beer anywhere in theuniverse. Rather, she is tacitly restricting her quantifier to thingsthat are in the fridge. Universalists often suggest that somethingsimilar is going on when ordinary speakers say ‘there are notrout-turkeys’ (or ‘there’s nothing that has bothfins and feathers’). Speakers are tacitly restricting theirquantifiers to ordinary objects, and what they are saying is entirelycompatible with there beingnon-ordinary finned-and-featheredthings like trout-turkeys. Universalists may then hold that theargument from counterexamples rests on an equivocation. If thequantifiers are meant to be restricted to ordinary objects, then CX2is true, but CX1 is false: universalism does not entail that anyordinary things are trout-turkeys. If on the other hand thequantifiers are meant to be entirely unrestricted then CX2 is false;but in denying CX2 (so understood), one is not running afoul ofanything we are inclined to say or believe or intuit.[56]

This is just one of many compatibilist strategies that have beendeployed in defense of revisionary views. Universalists have alsoinvoked an ambiguity in ‘object’ to explain the appeal of‘there is no object that has both fins and feathers’.Eliminativists have claimed that ordinary utterances of ‘thereare statues’ are instances of “loose talk”, or thatthey are context-sensitive, or that quantifiers are being used in aspecial technical sense in the “ontology room”.[57]

One common complaint about compatibilist accounts is that theseproposals about what we are saying and what we believe arelinguistically or psychologically implausible. For instance, whenordinary speakers are speaking loosely or restricting theirquantifiers, they will typically balk when their remarks are taken atface value. (“There’s no beer anywhere in theworld?”) But this sort of evidence seems just to be missing inthe cases at hand. (“You think there literally arestatues?” “There’s nothingat all with bothfins and feathers?”) Others have criticized compatibiliststrategies by pointing to limitations of their recipes forparaphrasing ordinary utterances. For instance, Uzquiano (2004:434–435) argues that the standard eliminativist strategy ofparaphrasing constructions of the form ‘there are Fs’ interms of there being atoms arranged Fwise cannot be adapted to handleconstructions like ‘some Fs are touching each other’.[58]

Revisionaries may instead wish to give incompatibilist accounts of theputative counterexamples, conceding that the revisionary views theydefend are incompatible with ordinary belief (ordinary discourse,common sense, intuition, etc.), but maintaining that the mistakes canbe explained or excused. For instance, revisionaries may contend thatthe mistaken beliefs are nevertheless justified, so long as one is notaware of the defeaters that undercut our usual justification (e.g.,those mentioned in§2.6). Or they may contend that ordinary speakers are not especiallycommitted to these beliefs, which may in turn suggest that they do notdeserve to be treated as data for purposes of philosophical inquiry.Or they may call attention to some respect in which the ordinaryutterances and beliefs are “nearly as good as true”.[59]

3.2 Arguments from Charity

One way of approaching the question of whether there are statues is byasking whether the correct interpretation of the English language isone according to which ordinary utterances of ‘there arestatues’ come out true. The interpretation of populations ofspeakers is plausibly governed by a principle of charity thatprohibits the gratuitous ascription of false beliefs and utterances topopulations of speakers. Such a principle—which is independentlymotivated by reflection on how it is that utterances come to have themeanings that they do—can be put to work in arguments for theexistence of ordinary objects and for the nonexistence ofextraordinary objects. Here is one such argument from charity:

(CH1)
The most charitable interpretation of English is one on whichordinary utterances of ‘there are statues’ comes outtrue.
(CH2)
If so, then ordinary utterances of ‘there are statues’are true.
(CH3)
If ordinary utterances of ‘there are statues’ aretrue, then there are statues.
(CH4)
So, there are statues.

To see the idea behind CH1, notice that both eliminativists andconservatives can agree that there are atoms arranged statuewise. Thequestion is whether the English sentence ‘there arestatues’ should be interpreted in such a way that the existenceof such atoms suffices for it to come out true. Let us callinterpretations of ‘there are statues’ on which theexistence of atoms arranged statuewise suffices for its truthliberal, and interpretations on which that does not sufficefor its truthdemanding. The idea then is that, given theavailability of both liberal and demanding interpretations, the formerwould clearly be more charitable. CH2 is motivated by the thought thatthere are no other content-determining factors that favor a demandinginterpretation over a liberal interpretation, in which case charitywins out and ‘there are statues’ is true. CH3 looks to bea straightforward application of a plausible disquotation principle:if sentence S says that p, and S is true, then p.[60]

One might challenge CH1 on the grounds that charitable interpretationis a holistic matter, and, while the liberal interpretations arecharitable in some respects, they are uncharitable in others. Afterall, the puzzles and arguments discussed in§2 seem to show that no interpretation can secure the truth ofeverything that we are inclined to say about ordinaryobjects. For instance, the liberal interpretations on which MC1 comesout true (‘Athena and Piece exist’) must, on pain ofcontradiction, make at least one of MC2 through MC4 come out false.But then some other intuitively true claim—perhaps,‘Athena and Piece (if they exist) areidentical’—will come out false. The demandinginterpretations on which MC1 comes out false do better than theliberal interpretations on this score, since they can makeall of MC2 through MC4 come out true. This gain in charitymight then be held to counterbalance the loss in charity fromrendering MC1 false.[61]

One might also challenge CH1 on the grounds that the principle ofcharity, properly understood, demands only that the utterances andbeliefs of ordinary speakers be reasonable, not that they be true.Since itlooks to ordinary speakers as if there are statues,and since they have no reason to believe that appearances aremisleading (having never encountered the arguments for eliminativism),their utterances and beliefs would be reasonable even if false. Theprinciple of charity, so understood, would not favor liberalinterpretations over demanding interpretations.[62]

Another strategy involves resisting the argument at CH2, bymaintaining that there are constraints beyond charity that favor thedemanding interpretations. Charity, after all, is not the only factorinvolved in determining the meanings of our utterances. Certainpuzzles about content determination have been thought to show that thecontent of an expression or utterance cannot be determined solely bywhich sentences we are inclined to regard as true; it is also partly amatter of the relative “naturalness” or“eligibility” of candidate contents. One who accepts thissort of account may maintain that the demanding interpretations,although less charitable, nevertheless assign more natural contents toEnglish sentences than the liberal interpretations, for instance byassigning a more natural meaning to the quantifiers.[63]

Finally, CH3 may be resisted by compatibilists, according to whom whatordinary speakers are saying is compatible with theeliminativist’s claim that statues do not exist. Sinceontological discussions (like this one) are not carried out inordinary English or ordinary contexts, one cannot infer that there arestatues from the fact that ordinary speakers can truly say‘there are statues’, any more than I can infer that I amon the moon from the fact that an astronaut truly utters ‘I amon the moon’.[64]

3.3 Arguments from Entailment

Arguments from entailment purport to establish that eliminativism isself-defeating, insofar as certain things that eliminativists affirmentail the existence of the very ordinary objects that they wish toeliminate. Here is a representative argument from entailment:

(ET1)
There are atoms arranged statuewise.
(ET2)
If there are atoms arranged statuewise, then there arestatues.
(ET3)
So, there are statues.

Now consider two arguments for ET2: the argument from identity and theargument from application conditions.

The argument from identity proceeds from the assumption that ordinaryobjects are identical to the smaller objects of which they arecomposed. The statue, for instance, is identical to its atomic parts.Accordingly, by affirming that there are atoms arranged statuewise,eliminativists let into their ontology the very things that they hadintended to exclude.[65]

However, the view that composites are identical to their parts ishighly controversial. One common objection is that the identityrelation simply isn’t the sort of relation that can hold betweena single thing and many things. Another common objection is thatordinary objects have different persistence conditions from theirparts. For instance, the atoms arranged statuewise, unlike the statue,will still exist if the statue disintegrates and the atoms disperse.It would then seem to follow by Leibniz’s Law that the atoms arenot identical to the statue.[66]

The argument from application conditions arises out of some generalconsiderations about how it is that kind terms refer to what they do.Suppose an archaeologist uncovers an unfamiliar artifact, gesturestowards it, and introduces the name ‘woodpick’ for thingsof that kind. Yet there are numerous things before her: the woodpick,the woodpick’s handle, the facing surface of the woodpick, etc.Furthermore, the woodpick itself belongs to numerous kinds:woodpick,tool,artifact, etc. So how is itthat ‘woodpick’ came to denote woodpicks rather thansomething else? (This is an instance of what is known asthequa problem.) It must be because the speaker associatescertain application conditions and perhaps other descriptiveinformation with the term ‘woodpick’, which single outwoodpicks—rather than all tools or just the facing surfaces ofwoodpicks—as the denotation of the term. And the same isplausibly so for already-entrenched kind terms like‘statue’: their reference is largely determined by theapplication conditions that speakers associate with them.[67]

Armed with this account of reference determination, one might thenargue for ET2 as follows. The application conditions that competentspeakers associate with ‘statue’—together with factsabout the distribution of atoms—determine whether it applies tosomething. But these applications conditions are fairly undemanding:nothing further is required for their satisfaction than that there beatoms arranged statuewise. Accordingly, so long as there are atomsarranged statuewise, ‘statue’ does apply to something,from which it trivially follows that there are statues.[68]

This argument may be resisted on the grounds that the applicationconditions that ordinary speakers associate with ‘statue’aren’t quite so undemanding. It’s not enough simply thatthere be atoms arranged statuewise. Rather, there must be an objectthat is composed of the atoms—and (eliminativists might go on toinsist) there are no such objects. However, those who are moved by thequa problem might respond that ‘object’ itself must beassociated with application conditions, which are likewisesufficiently undemanding as to be satisfied so long as there are atomsarranged statuewise.[69]

3.4 Arguments from Coincidence

The material constitution puzzles from§2.3 can be repurposed as arguments against two forms of permissivism:universalism and the doctrine of arbitrary undetached parts (DAUP).The basic idea behind both arguments is that permissivists end upcommitted to objects that are distinct and yet share all of theirparts, which is impossible.[70]

Here is a coincidence argument against universalism. Let the ks be theatoms that presently compose my kitchen table, K, and let us supposethat there is some time, t, long before the table itself was made, atwhich the ks all existed.

(CU1)
If universalism is true, then there is some object, F, that the kscomposed at t.
(CU2)
If the ks composed F at t, then F exists now.
(CU3)
If F exists now, then F = K.
(CU4)
If F = K, then K existed at t.
(CU5)
K did not exist at t.
(CU6)
So, universalism is false.

CU1 looks to be a consequence of universalism, given our assumptionthat the ks all existed at t. The idea behind CU2 is that there wouldseem to be only two nonarbitrary accounts of the persistenceconditions of the widely scattered fusion F: (i) that F exists for aslong as the ks are in precisely the arrangement that they enjoy at tor (ii) that F exists for as long as the ks exist. Option (i) imposesan implausibly severe constraint on the sorts of changes an object cansurvive, which leaves us with option (ii)—from which it followsthat, since the ks exist now, so does F. The idea behind CU3 is thatthere cannot be distinct objects which (like F and K) have exactly thesame parts and exactly the same location. CU4 is a straightforwardconsequence of Leibniz’s Law: F by hypothesis existed at t, soif F = K then K must also have existed at t. As for CU5, tablesplausibly are essentially tables, in which case K could not haveexisted before the table was made.

Here are some options for resisting the argument (some mirroringresponses to the puzzles of material constitution). One can deny CU2on the grounds thattable is the “dominant kind”,and once K comes into existence, it takes F’s place and F isannihilated. Constitutional pluralists can deny CU3 and affirm that F≠ K, perhaps granting that distinct objects can have exactly thesame parts and location, or insisting that F and K have different(e.g., temporal) parts. Or one can deny CU5, insisting that K is onlycontingently a table and (like F) was once a scattered fusion.[71]

Now for the coincidence argument against DAUP. Take the example ofWoodrow and Woodrow-minus from§2.8. At t1, Molly the cellulose molecule is a part of Woodrowand at t2 Molly is removed and destroyed. LetWoodrow1 be that (if anything) which ‘Woodrow’picks out at t1; Woodrow2, that (if anything)which ‘Woodrow’ picks out at t2; and mutatismutandis for Woodrow-minus1 and Woodrow-minus2.Here is the argument:

(CD1)
If DAUP is true, then Woodrow-minus1 exists.
(CD2)
If Woodrow-minus1 exists, thenWoodrow-minus2 exists.
(CD3)
If Woodrow-minus2 exists, thenWoodrow-minus2 = Woodrow2.
(CD4)
If Woodrow-minus2 = Woodrow2, thenWoodrow-minus1 = Woodrow1.
(CD5)
Woodrow-minus1 ≠ Woodrow1.
(CD6)
So, DAUP is false.

CD1 looks trivial: DAUP guarantees that there is an arbitraryundetached part of Woodrow composed of all of its parts other thanMolly. The idea behind CD2 is that Woodrow-minus doesn’t undergoany change between t1 and t2 that could threatenits existence; all that happens is that it is separated from something(Molly) that was not even a part of it. CD3, like CU3, is motivated bythe intuition that objects with the same parts and same location mustbe identical. CD4 is an application of the transitivity of identity:Woodrow-minus1 = Woodrow-minus2, so ifWoodrow-minus2 = Woodrow2, then (bytransitivity) Woodrow-minus1 = Woodrow2; andsince Woodrow2 = Woodrow1, it follows (bytransitivity) that Woodrow-minus1 = Woodrow1.Finally, CD5 is a straightforward consequence of Leibniz’s Law:Woodrow-minus1 and Woodrow1 have different partsand thus cannot be identical.

As with the argument against universalism, one can resist thisargument by denying CD2 and insisting that once Molly is removed,Woodrow-minus is “dominated” by Woodrow and ceases toexist. Or one can deny CD3 and insist that Woodrow and Woodrow-minusare distinct at t2 despite having all the same materialparts at t2. Or one can deny CD4 by insisting that Woodrowhas all of its parts essentially, in which case Woodrow1≠ Woodrow2.[72]

3.5 Arguments from Gunk and Junk

A “gunky” object is a composite object all of whose partsthemselves have parts. The mere possibility of gunky objectsunderwrites an argument against the nihilist thesis that (actually)there are no composite objects.

(GK1)
It is possible for there to be gunky objects.
(GK2)
If gunky objects are possible, then nihilism isn’tnecessarily true.
(GK3)
If nihilism isn’t necessarily true, then nihilismisn’t actually true.
(GK4)
So, nihilism is false.

GK1 is plausible. It seems easy enough to imagine gunky objects, forinstance by imagining an object with a right and left half, each ofwhich itself has a right and left half, which themselves have rightand left halves … “all the way down”, and neverterminating in simple parts. Moreover, it may even be thatactually all objects are gunky. GK2 is trivial: if there aregunky objects in world w, then there is something with parts in w, inwhich case there are composites in w and nihilism is false in w. GK3is plausible as well: the actual world contains what would seem to beparadigm cases of composites (trees, etc.), so if composition occursanywhere, it surely occurs here. Moreover, nihilism is meant to be ananswer to the special composition question, and one would expect suchan answer to be giving necessary and sufficient conditions forcomposition—in which case one would expect proponents ofnihilism to regard it as a necessary truth.[73]

Some will deny GK1. What does seem obviously possible (and easilyimaginable) for there to be certain kinds of infinite descent. Butinfinite descent need not be mereological. For instance, it does seempossible for there to be objects that can be divided into two halves,and whose halves can in turn be divided into two halves, and so on.But it is controversial whether the fact that ocan bedivided into two halves, h1 and h2, entails thato is not simple. One might deny that h1 and h2exist at all before the division: they are brought into existence wheno is divided and, a fortiori, are not parts of o prior to division. Orone might concede that, prior to division, h1 andh2 exist and are partially colocated with o, but deny thatthey are thereby parts of o.[74]

One might instead reject GK3 on the grounds that it runs afoul of“Hume’s Dictum”, according to which there can be nonecessary connections among distinct existences. There is somecontroversy about how best to understand Hume’s Dictum and, inparticular, whether it prohibits necessary connections even betweenoverlapping items (which typically are thought not to be“distinct” in the relevant sense). But assuming that itdoes, then it will rule out any principle of composition according towhich simples in certain arrangements cannot fail to composesomething—for this would be to impose a necessary connectionbetween simples being in that arrangement and the existence of a(numerically distinct) whole that they compose. And if we cannot ingeneral expect theories of composition to be necessary if true, weshould not expect nihilism to be necessary if true.[75]

Just as the possibility of infinite descent can be wielded againstnihilism, the possibility of infinite ascent can be wielded againstuniversalism. Let us say that a world is “junky” iff everyobject in that world is a part of some further object.

(JK1)
Junky worlds are possible.
(JK2)
If junky worlds are possible, then universalism isn’tnecessarily true.
(JK3)
If universalism isn’t necessarily true, then universalismisn’t actually true.
(JK4)
So, universalism is false.

The idea behind JK1 is supposed to be that, just as there is nological or conceptual barrier to an infinite descent of parts, thereis no logical or conceptual barrier to an infinite ascent of wholes.(Though not everyone finds themselves able to conceive of junkyworlds.) The idea behind JK2 runs as follows. According touniversalism, every plurality of objects has a fusion, and, inparticular, the plurality consisting of all things has a fusion. Butthere can be no fusion of all things in a junky world. For that fusionwould have to be a part of something (since the world is junky); butif it already has everything as a part, there is nothing left for itto be a part of. JK3 can be motivated in much the same way as GK3:universalism is meant to be an answer to the special compositionquestion, and thus will presumably be necessary if true. Thestrategies considered above for resisting the gunk argument seem toapply equally to the junk argument—one can, for instance, denythat we are imagining what we think we are, or one can invokeHume’s Dictum and deny that universalism is necessary if true.[76]

4. Fundamental Existents

As we have seen, there are some who deny that ordinary compositeobjects exist, and we have examined some of their reasons forembracing one or another form of eliminativism. But there are alsosome who grant that ordinary objects exist but deny that they existfundamentally. This is an importantly different claim, whichcan be spelled out in either of two importantly different ways.[77]

First, one might deny that any ordinary composite objects arefundamental, that is, one can insist that there is something in whichthey are grounded. Even those who think that ordinary objects existwill likely find it natural to suppose that no ordinary composites arefundamental: all ordinary composites are ultimately going to begrounded in their simple microscopic parts.[78]

On the second understanding of the claim that ordinary objects do notexist fundamentally, the idea is that they are not in the domain of afundamental quantifier, where the fundamental quantifiers are thequantifiers that appear in the best correct and complete theory of theworld. To help see how the two understandings of “existsfundamentally” can come apart, notice that the identity relationis plausibly fundamental (appearing in the best theory of the world),despite the fact that it relates every object—includingnonfundamental objects—to itself. A relation can be fundamentalwithout dragging everything in its extension into the fundamentallevel with it. Similarly, even if the ordinary existential quantifieris a fundamental quantifier, that does not obviously entail thateverything in its domain (namely: everything) is fundamental as well.[79]

Even so, one might deny that the ordinary existential quantifier is afundamental quantifier on grounds of parsimony. Explanations involvingquantifiers whose domains include nonfundamental objects (the ideagoes) will be less parsimonious than explanations involvingquantifiers whose domains include only fundamental objects. And sincethe ordinary existential quantifier includes nonfundamental objects(e.g., ordinary composites), it will be less fundamental thanrestricted quantifiers ranging only over fundamental objects.[80]

How do these stances on fundamentality—that ordinary objects arenot fundamental or are not in the domain of fundamentalquantifiers—compare to the eliminativist theses discussed above?Although there is a superficial resemblance, the differences aremanifest when we consider how the views interact with the argumentsagainst conservatism in§2. Eliminativists, who say that ordinary objects do not exist, canaccept AV5, DK4, OD5, SR4, and ST8 and can reject AR1, MC1, and PM3 inthe arguments above, since the latter affirm, and the former deny, theexistence of ordinary objects. But those who are willing to deny onlythat ordinary objects existfundamentally (in one or theother sense) must find some other way of addressing the arguments.

Bibliography

  • Almotahari, Mahrad, 2014, ‘The Identity of a Material Thingand its Matter’,Philosophical Quarterly, 64:387–406.
  • –––, 2017, ‘ ‘Not’ Again!Another Essay on the Metaphysics of Material Objects’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 94:711–737.
  • –––, 2020, ‘A Little Puzzle about aPiece and the Puddle’,Oxford Studies inMetaphysics, 12: 231–261.
  • Antony, Michael V., 2006, ‘Vagueness and the Metaphysics ofConsciousness’,Philosophical Studies, 128:515–538.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Are Our ConceptsConsciousState andConscious Creature Vague?’, Erkenntnis,68: 239–263.
  • Armstrong, David M., 1978,Universals and ScientificRealism (Volume 1), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • –––, 1997,A World of States ofAffairs, New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Árnadóttir, Steinvör Thöll, 2015,‘Overdetermination and Elimination’,InternationalJournal of Philosophical Studies, 23: 479–503.
  • Ayers, Michael R., 1974, ‘Individuals withoutSortals’,Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 4:113–148.
  • Azzouni, Jody, 2017,Ontology Without Borders, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • Baber, H. E., 2024, ‘The Puzzle of Dion and TheonSolved’, 52: 257–267.
  • Bagwell, Jeffrey N., 2021, ‘Eliminativism and EvolutionaryDebunking’,Ergo, 8: 496–522.
  • Bailey, Andrew M., 2011, ‘The Incompatibility of Compositionas Identity, Priority Pluralism, and Irreflexive Grounding’,Analytic Philosophy, 52: 171–174.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Composition and theCases’,Inquiry, 59:453–470.
  • Baker, Lynne Rudder, 1997, ‘Why Constitution is notIdentity,’The Journal of Philosophy, 94:599–621.
  • –––, 2000,Persons and Bodies,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • –––, 2003, ‘Review ofObjects andPersons’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 81:97–98.
  • –––, 2007,The Metaphysics of EverydayLife, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Balaguer, Mark, 2018, ‘Why the Debate about Composition isFactually Empty’,Synthese, 195: 3975–4008.
  • –––, 2021,Metaphysics, Sophistry, andIllusion, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Balashov, Yuri, 2005, ‘On Vagueness, 4D and DiachronicUniversalism’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 83:523–531.
  • –––, 2007, ‘About StageUniversalism’,Philosophical Quarterly, 57:21–39.
  • Barker, Jonathan, 2020, ‘Debunking Arguments andMetaphysical Laws’,Philosophical Studies, 177:1829–1855.
  • Barker, Stephen and Mark Jago, 2014, ‘Monism and MaterialConstitution’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 95:189–204.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Material Objects and EssentialBundle Theory’,Philosophical Studies, 175:2969–2986.
  • Barnes, Elizabeth, 2005, ‘Vagueness in Sparseness: A Studyin Property Ontology’,Analysis, 65:315–321.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Vagueness and Arbitrariness:Merricks on Composition’,Mind, 116:105–113.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Metaphysically IndeterminateExistence’,Philosophical Studies, 166:495–510.
  • Båve, Arvid, 2011, ‘How To PrecisifyQuantifiers’,Journal of Philosophical Logic, 40:103–111.
  • Baxter, Donald L. M., 1988, ‘Many-One Identity’,Philosophical Papers, 17: 193–216.
  • Beebee, Helen, 2017, ‘Do Ordinary Objects Exist? Yes’,in Elizabeth Barnes (ed.),Current Controversies inMetaphysics, New York: Routledge, pp. 149–163.
  • Belleri, Delia, 2018, ‘Two Species of Merely VerbalDisputes’,Metaphilosophy, 49: 691–710.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Ontological Disagreements,Reliability, and Standoffs: the PluralistOption’,Metaphilosophy, 52: 348–362.
  • Bennett, Karen, 2004, ‘Spatio-Temporal Coincidence and theGrounding Problem’,Philosophical Studies, 118:339–371.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Composition, Colocation, andMetaontology’, in David Chalmers, David Manley, and RyanWasserman (eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, pp. 38–76.
  • Benovsky, Jiri, 2015, ‘From Experience toMetaphysics’,Noûs, 49: 684–697.
  • –––, 2018,Eliminativism, Objects, andPersons, New York: Routledge.
  • Bernstein, Sara, 2016, ‘OverdeterminationUnderdetermined’,Erkenntnis, 81: 17–40.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Could a Middle Level be theMost Fundamental?’,PhilosophicalStudies, 178: 1065–1078.
  • Bigelow, John and Robert Pargetter, 2006, ‘Real Work forAggregates’,Dialectica, 60: 485–503.
  • Bird, Alexander, ‘Restricted Composition is InformationCompression’,Philosophical Quarterly, 73:677–700.
  • Biro, John, 2017, ‘Saving the Ship’,EuropeanJournal of Analytic Philosophy, 13: 43–54.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Constitution andIdentity’,Erkenntnis, 83: 1127–1138.
  • –––, 2020, ‘Leading a Double Life: Statuesand Pieces of Clay’,Metaphysica, 21:273–277.
  • –––, 2022, ‘Two Notes onComposition’,Metaphysica, 23:445–454.
  • Blanchard, Thomas, 2023, ‘The Causal Efficacy ofComposites’,Philosophical Studies, 180:2685–2706.
  • Bohn, Einar D., 2009a, ‘An Argument Against the Necessity ofUnrestricted Composition’,Analysis, 69:27–31.
  • –––, 2009b, ‘Must There Be a TopLevel?’,Philosophical Quarterly, 59:193–201.
  • Bowers, Jason, 2019, ‘A Teleological Answer to the SpecialComposition Question’,Dialectica, 73:231–246.
  • Braddon-Mitchell, David and Kristie Miller, 2006, ‘Talkingabout a Universalist World’,Philosophical Studies,130: 499–534.
  • Brenner, Andrew, 2015a, ‘Mereological Nihilism andTheoretical Unification’,Analytic Philosophy, 56:318–337.
  • –––, 2015b, ‘Mereological Nihilism and theSpecial Arrangement Question’,Synthese, 192:1295–1314.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Mereological Nihilism andPersonal Ontology’,Philosophical Quarterly, 67:464–485.
  • –––, 2018a, ‘Easy Ontology, ApplicationConditions and Infinite Regress’,Analysis, 78:605–614.
  • –––, 2018b, ‘Science and the SpecialComposition Question’,Synthese, 195:657–678.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Mereology and Ideology’,Synthese, 198: 7421–7448.
  • –––, 2022, ‘How to Be a MereologicalAnti-Realist’,Oxford Studies in the Philosophy ofReligion, 10: 83–119.
  • –––, 2024, ‘Sense Perception andMereological Nihilism’,Philosophical Quarterly,74: 68–83.
  • Bricker, Phillip, 2016, ‘Composition as a Kind ofIdentity’,Inquiry, 59: 264–294.
  • Brzozowski, Jacek, 2016, ‘Monism and Gunk’, in MarkJago (ed.),Reality Making, Oxford: Oxford University Press,pp. 57–74.
  • Bucchioni, Guillaume, 2022, ‘The Nature of OrdinaryObjects’, in Fosca Mariani Zini (ed.),The Meaningof Something, Springer, pp. 117–132.
  • Builes, David, 2021, ‘The World Just Is the Way ItIs’,The Monist, 104: 1–27.
  • –––, 2022, ‘Ontology andArbitrariness’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 100: 485–495.
  • Builes, David and Caspar Hare, 2023, ‘Why Aren't I Part of aWhale’,Analysis, 83: 227–234.
  • Builes, David and Jessica M. Wilson, 2022, ‘In Defense ofCountabilism’,Philosophical Studies, 179:2199–2236.
  • Burke, Michael B., 1980, ‘Cohabitation, Stuff andIntermittent Existence’,Mind, 89: 391–405.
  • –––, 1992, ‘Copper Statues and Pieces ofCopper: A Challenge to the Standard Account’,Analysis,52: 12–17.
  • –––, 1994a, ‘Dion and Theon: AnEssentialist Solution to an Ancient Puzzle’,The Journal ofPhilosophy, 91: 129–139.
  • –––, 1994b, ‘Preserving the Principle ofOne Object to a Place’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 54: 591–624. Reprinted in Rea 1997a.
  • –––, 1996, ‘Tibbles the Cat: A ModernSophisma’,Philosophical Studies, 84: 63–74.
  • –––, 1997, ‘Coinciding Objects: Reply toLowe and Denkel’,Analysis, 57: 11–18.
  • –––, 2003, ‘Is My Head a Person?’,in K. Petrus (ed.),On Human Persons, Frankfurt: OntosVerlag, pp. 107–125.
  • –––, 2004, ‘Dion, Theon, and theMany-Thinkers Problem’,Analysis, 64:242–250.
  • Button, Tim, 2020, ‘Deflationary Metaphysics and OrdinaryLanguage,Synthese, 197: 33–57.
  • Byrne, Alex, 2019, ‘Perception and Ordinary Objects’,in Javier Cumpa and Bill Brewer (eds.),The Nature of OrdinaryObjects, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.6–26.
  • Byrne, Alex and Riccardo Manzotti, 2022, ‘Hallucination andIts Objects’,Philosophical Review, 131:327–359.
  • Calosi, Claudio, 2016, ‘Composition is Identity andMereological Nihilism’,Philosophical Quarterly, 66:219–235.
  • –––, 2022, ‘The Bound State Answer to theSpecial Composition Question’,Philosophy ofScience, 89: 486–503.
  • –––, 2023, ‘On the Contingency ofUniversalism’,Erkenntnis, 88:1997–2011.
  • Cameron, Ross P., 2007, ‘The Contingency ofComposition’,Philosophical Studies, 136:99–121.
  • –––, 2008a, ‘There Are No Things That AreMusic Works’,British Journal of Aesthetics, 48:295–314.
  • –––, 2008b, ‘Truthmakers and NecessaryConnections’,Synthese, 161: 27–45.
  • –––, 2008c, ‘Truthmakers and OntologicalCommitment’,Philosophical Studies, 140:1–18.
  • –––, 2010a, ‘How to Have a RadicallyMinimal Ontology’,Philosophical Studies, 151:249–264.
  • –––, 2010b, ‘Quantification, Naturalnessand Ontology’, in Allan Hazlett (ed.),New Waves inMetaphysics, New York: Palgrave-Macmillan, pp. 8–26.
  • –––, 2010c, ‘Vagueness andNaturalness’,Erkenntnis, 72: 281–293.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Composition as IdentityDoesn’t Settle the Special Composition Question’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 84:531–554.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Parts Generate the Whole, ButThey Are Not Identical To It’, in A. J. Cotnoir and Donald L. M.Baxter (eds.),Composition as Identity, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, pp. 90–107.
  • Campdelacreu, Marta, 2010a, ‘Naturalness, Vagueness, andSortals’,Metaphysica, 11: 79–91.
  • –––, 2010b, ‘StageUniversalism,Voints andSorts’,Disputatio, 3: 293–307.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Sutton’s Solution to theGrounding Problem and Intrinsically Composed ColocatedObjects’,Crítica, 48: 77–92.
  • –––, 2020, ‘A New Solution to theGrounding Problem’,Humanities Journal ofValparaiso, 16: 61–87.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Colocationist Answers to theGrounding Problem’,Theoria, 87:1444–1467.
  • Carmichael, Chad, 2011, ‘Vague Composition Without VagueExistence’,Noûs, 45: 315–327.
  • –––, 2015, ‘Toward a Commonsense Answer tothe Special Composition Question’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 93: 475–490.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Deep Platonism’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 92:307–328.
  • –––, 2020, ‘How to Solve the Puzzle ofDion and Theon Without Losing Your Head’,Mind, 129:205–224.
  • Carrara, Massimiliano and Giorgio Lando, 2017, ‘Compositionand Relative Counting’,Dialectica, 71:489–529.
  • Carrara, Massimiliano and Vittorio Morato, 2023a, ‘ACompatibilist Approach in Ontology: Steps Towards aFormalization’, in N. Aussenac-Gilles, et al. (eds.),FormalOntology in Information Systems, IOS Press, pp.182–194.
  • –––, 2023b, ‘How to Be a Compatibilist inMetaphysics: the Epistemic Strategy’,Inquiry, 66:1928–1952.
  • Carroll, John W. and William R. Carter, 2005, ‘An UnstableEliminativism’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 86:1–17.
  • Carter, William R., 1983, ‘In Defense of UndetachedParts’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 64:126–143.
  • Cartwright, Richard, 1975, ‘Scattered Objects’, inKeith Lehrer (ed.),Analysis and Metaphysics, Boston: ReidelPublishing Company, pp. 153–171.
  • Castillo-Gamboa, Jaime, forthcoming, ‘The Argument fromDeterminate Vagueness’,Oxford Studies inMetaphysics.
  • Caulton, Adam, 2015, ‘Is Mereology Empirical? Compositionfor Fermions’, in Tomasz Bigaj and Christian Wüthrich(eds.),Metaphysics in Contemporary Physics, New York:Rodopi, pp. 293–322.
  • Caves, Richard L. J., 2018, ‘Emergence for Nihilists’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 99: 2–28.
  • Chalmers, David, 2009, ‘Ontological Anti-Realism’, inDavid Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman (eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.77–129.
  • Chihara, Charles S., 1994, ‘The Many Persons Problem’,Philosophical Studies, 76: 45–49.
  • Chisholm, Roderick M., 1973, ‘Parts as Essential to TheirWholes’,Review of Metaphysics, 26: 581–603.
  • –––, 1976,Person and Object, London:George Allen and Unwin Ltd. “Identity Through Time” (Ch.3) is reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1986, ‘Self-Profile’, in RaduJ. Bogdan (ed.),Roderick M. Chisholm, Dordrecht: D. Reidel,pp. 3–77.
  • Colyvan, Mark, 1998, ‘Can the Eleatic Principle beJustified?’,Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 28:313–336.
  • Comesaña. Juan, 2008, ‘Could There Be Exactly TwoThings?’,Synthese, 162: 31–35.
  • Contessa, Gabriele, 2012, ‘The Junk Argument: Safe DisposalGuidelines for Mereological Universalists’,Analysis,72: 455–457.
  • –––, 2014, ‘One’s a Crowd:Mereological Nihilism Without Ordinary-Object Eliminativism’,Analytic Philosophy, 55: 199–221.
  • Corcoran, Kevin J., 1999, ‘Persons, Bodies, and theConstitution Relation’,Southern Journal of Philosophy,37: 1–20.
  • Cornell, David, 2016, ‘Taking Monism Seriously’,Philosophical Studies, 173: 2397–2415.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Salvaging Truth fromOntological Scrap’,Philosophy, 96:433–455.
  • Cotnoir, Aaron J., 2010, ‘Antisymmetry and Non-ExtensionalMereology’,Philosophical Quarterly, 60:396–405.
  • –––, 2013a, ‘Composition as GeneralIdentity’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 8:295–322.
  • –––, 2013b, ‘Parts as Counterparts’,Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, 2: 228–241.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Universalism and Junk’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 92: 649–664.
  • –––, 2016a, ‘Does Universalism EntailExtensionalism?’,Noûs, 50:121–132.
  • –––, 2016b, ‘How Many Angels Can Be in theSame Place at the Same Time? A Defense of MereologicalUniversalism’,Mind, 125: 959–965.
  • Cotnoir, Aaron J. and Donald L. M. Baxter, 2014,Compositionas Identity, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Cowling, Sam, 2013, ‘Ideological Parsimony’,Synthese, 190: 3889–3908.
  • –––, 2014, ‘No Simples, No Gunk, NoNothing’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 95:246–60.
  • –––, 2015, ‘Advice for Eleatics’, inChris Daly (ed.),Palgrave Handbook of Philosophical Methods,Palgrave, pp. 306–330.
  • Crane, Judith K., 2012, ‘Biological–MereologicalCoincidence’,Philosophical Studies, 161:309–325.
  • Cray, Wesley, 2014, ‘Inconstancy and Content’,Dialectica, 68: 337–353.
  • Cutter, Brian, forthcoming, ‘The Many-Subjects ArgumentAgainst Physicalism’, in Geoffrey Lee and Adam Pautz (eds.),The Importance of Being Conscious, Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress.
  • Da Vee, Dean, 2021, ‘An Epistemological Problem forMinimalist Views about Composition’,Synthese, 199:9649–9668.
  • Daly, Chris and David Liggins, 2010, ‘In Defence of ErrorTheory’,Philosophical Studies, 149: 209–230.
  • –––, 2016a, ‘Dorr on the Language ofOntology’,Philosophical Studies, 173:3301–3315.
  • –––, 2016b, ‘Is Ontological RevisionismUncharitable?’,Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 46:405–425.
  • Dasgupta, Shamik, 2009, ‘Individuals: An Essay inRevisionary Metaphysics’,Philosophical Studies, 145:35–67.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Essentialism and theNonidentity Problem’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 96: 540–570.
  • Davidson, Donald, 1974, ‘On the Very Idea of a ConceptualScheme’,Proceedings and Addresses of the AmericanPhilosophical Association, 47: 5–20.
  • –––, 1989/2008, ‘A Coherence Theory ofTruth and Knowledge’, in Ernest Sosa, Jaegwon Kim, Jeremy Fantl,and Matthew McGrath (eds.),Epistemology: An Anthology,Malden: Blackwell, pp. 124–133.
  • Denkel, Arda, 1995, ‘Theon’s Tale: Does a CambridgeChange Result in a Substantial Change?’,Analysis, 55:166–170.
  • deRosset, Louis, 2011, ‘What is the GroundingProblem?’,Philosophical Studies, 156:173–197.
  • –––, 2015, ‘Analyticity andOntology’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 9:129–170.
  • –––, 2020, ‘What is Conservatism?’,Analysis, 80: 514–533.
  • Dershowitz, Naomi, 2022, ‘Nihilism, but NotNecessarily’,Erkenntnis, 87: 2441–2456.
  • Devitt, Michael and Kim Sterelny, 1999,Language andReality, Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Doepke, Fred, 1982, ‘Spatially Coinciding Objects’,Ratio, 24: 45–60. Reprinted in Rea 1997a.
  • –––, 1986a, ‘In Defence of Locke’sPrinciple: a Reply to Peter M. Simons’,Mind, 95:238–241.
  • –––, 1986b, ‘The Trees ofConstitution’,Philosophical Studies, 49:385–392.
  • Donnelly, Maureen, 2009, ‘Mereological Vagueness andExistential Vagueness’,Synthese, 168:53–79.
  • –––, 2014, ‘A Linguistic Account ofMereological Vagueness’, in Akiba, Ken and Ali Abasnezhad(eds.),Vague Objects and Vague Identity, Dordrecht:Springer, pp. 43–65.
  • Dohrn, Daniel, forthcoming, ‘Don’t ImagineJunk!’,Synthese.
  • Dorr, Cian, 2003, ‘Merricks on the Existence of HumanOrganisms’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,67: 711–718.
  • –––, 2005, ‘What We Disagree About When WeDisagree About Ontology’, in Mark Kalderon (ed.),Fictionalism in Metaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press,pp. 234–286.
  • –––, 2008, ‘There are no AbstractObjects’, in Theodore Sider, John Hawthorne, and Dean W.Zimmerman (eds.),Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics,Malden: Blackwell, pp. 32–63.
  • Dorr, Cian, John Hawthorne, and Juhani Vli-Vakkuri,2022,The Bounds of Possibility, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press.
  • Dowland, S. Clint, 2016, ‘Embodied Mind Sparsism’,Philosophical Studies, 173: 1853–1872.
  • Dyke, Heather, 2008,Metaphysics and the RepresentationalFallacy, New York: Routledge.
  • Effingham, Nikk, 2009, ‘Universalism, Vagueness, andSupersubstantivalism’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 87: 35–42.
  • –––, 2011a, ‘Sider, Hawley, Sider and theVagueness Argument’,Philosophical Studies, 154:241–250.
  • –––, 2011b, ‘Undermining Motivations forUniversalism’,Noûs, 45: 696–713.
  • –––, 2011c, ‘Universalism andClasses’,Dialectica, 65: 451–472.
  • Einheuser, Iris, 2006, ‘CounterconventionalConditionals’,Philosophical Studies, 127:459–482.
  • –––, 2011, ‘Toward a ConceptualistSolution of the Grounding Problem’,Noûs, 45:300–314.
  • Eklund, Matti, 2002, ‘Peter van Inwagen on MaterialBeings’,Ratio, 15: 245–256.
  • –––, 2005, ‘Fiction, Indifference, andOntology’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,71: 557–579.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Neo-Fregean Ontology’,Philosophical Perspectives, 20: 95–121.
  • –––, 2008, ‘The Picture of Reality as anAmorphous Lump’, in Theodore Sider, John Hawthorne, and Dean W.Zimmerman (eds.),Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics,Malden: Blackwell, pp. 382–396.
  • –––, 2020, ‘The Existence ofPersonites’,Synthese, 177: 2051–2071.
  • Elder, Crawford L., 2000, ‘Familiar Objects and the Soritesof Decomposition’,American Philosophical Quarterly,37: 79–89.
  • –––, 2004,Real Natures and FamiliarObjects, Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • –––, 2007, ‘On the Phenomenon of“Dog-Wise Arrangement”’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 74: 132–155.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Against Universal MereologicalComposition’,Dialectica, 62: 433–454.
  • –––, 2011,Familiar Objects and TheirShadows, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Emery, Nina, 2023,Naturalism Beyond the Limits ofScience, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, forthcoming, ‘Mooreanism inMetaphysics from Mooreanism in Physics’,Inquiry.
  • Evans, Gareth, 1978, ‘Can There be Vague Objects?’,Analysis, 38: 208. Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • Evnine, Simon, 2016a,Making Objects and Events: A HylomorphicTheory of Artifacts, Actions, and Organisms, Oxford UniversityPress.
  • –––, 2016b, ‘Much Ado AboutSomething-From-Nothing: Problems for Ontological Minimalism’, inStephan Blatti and Sandra Lapointe (eds.),Ontology AfterCarnap, Oxford University Press, pp. 145–164.
  • Fairchild, Maegan, 2017, ‘A Paradox of Matter andForm’,Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, 6: 33–42.
  • –––, 2019, ‘The Barest Flutter of theSmallest Leaf: Understanding Material Plenitude’,Philosophical Review, 128: 143–178.
  • –––, 2022a, ‘Arbitrariness and the LongRoad to Permissivism’,Noûs, 56:619–638.
  • –––, 2022b, ‘Plenitude, Coincidence,and Humility’,Philosophical Perspectives, 36:59–77.
  • Fairchild, Maegan and John Hawthorne, 2018, ‘AgainstConservatism in Metaphysics’,Royal Institute of PhilosophySupplement, 82: 45–75.
  • Falls, Edward, 2021, ‘Composition as Identity, Universalism,and Generic Quantifiers’,Erkenntnis, 86:1277–1291.
  • Fara, Delia Graff, 2008, ‘Relative-Sameness CounterpartTheory’,Review of Symbolic Logic, 1:167–189.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Possibility Relative to aSortal’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 7:3–40.
  • Fine, Kit, 1982, ‘Acts, Events, and Things’, in W.Leinfellner, E. Kraemer, and J. Schank (eds.),Language andOntology, Vienna: Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky, pp.97–105.
  • –––, 1999, ‘Things and Their Parts’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 23: 61–74.
  • –––, 2000, ‘A Counter-example toLocke’s Thesis’,The Monist, 83:357–361.
  • –––, 2003, ‘The Non-identity of a Thingand its Matter’,Mind, 112: 195–234.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Arguing for Non-Identity: AResponse to King and Frances’,Mind, 115:1059–1082.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Coincidence and Form’,Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 82:101–118.
  • –––, 2009, The Question of Ontology, in David J.Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman (eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.157–177.
  • Frances, Bryan, 2006, ‘The New Leibniz’s Law Argumentsfor Pluralism’,Mind, 115: 1007–1021.
  • Francescotti, Robert, 2019, ‘Maximality, Function, and theMany’,Metaphysica, 20: 175–193.
  • French, Steven, 2010, ‘The Interdependence of Structure,Objects and Dependence’,Synthese, 175:89–109.
  • –––, 2014,The Structure of the World:Metaphysics and Representation, Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress.
  • Gabriel, John, 2017, ‘Particularism AboutComposition’,Ratio, 30: 15–30.
  • Gallois, André, 2004, ‘Comments on Ted Sider: FourDimensionalism’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 67: 648–657.
  • Gauker, Christopher, 1986, ‘The Principle of Charity’,Synthese, 69: 1–25.
  • Geach, Peter T., 1980,Reference and Generality, 3rdedition, Ithaca: Cornell.
  • Gibbard, Allan, 1975, ‘Contingent Identity’,Journal of Philosophical Logic, 4: 187–221. Reprintedin Rea 1997a and in Kim et al. 2011.
  • Giberman, Daniel, 2015a, ‘Junky-Non-Worlds’,Erkenntnis, 80: 437–443.
  • –––, 2015b, ‘A Topological Theory ofFundamental Concrete Particulars’,PhilosophicalStudies, 172: 2679–2704.
  • –––, 2019, ‘Plurdurance’,Philosophers’ Imprint, 19: 1–19.
  • Gilmore, Cody, 2010, ‘Sider, the Inheritance ofIntrinsicality, and Theories of Composition’,PhilosophicalStudies, 151: 177–197.
  • Ginet, Carl, 1985, ‘Plantinga and the Philosophy ofMind’, in James E. Tomberlin and Peter van Inwagen (eds.),Alvin Plantinga, Dordrecht: D. Reidel, pp.199–223.
  • Gładziejewsi, Paweł, 2023, ‘Un-debunking OrdinaryObjects with the Help of Predictive Processing’,BritishJournal for the Philosophy of Science, 74: 1047–1068.
  • Goff, Philip, 2012, ‘There is More than One Thing’, inPhilip Goff (ed.),Spinoza on Monism, Palgrave-Macmillan, pp.113–22.
  • Goldwater, Jonah P. B., 2015, ‘No Composition, No Problem:Ordinary Objects as Arrangements’,Philosophia, 43:367–379.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Physicalism and the SortalistConception of Objects’,Synthese, 195:5497–5519.
  • –––, 2020, ‘How Many There AreIsn’t’,Philosophia, 48: 1037–1057.
  • –––, 2021, ‘The Lump and the Ledger:Material Coincidence at Little-to-No Cost’,Erkenntnis, 86: 789–821.
  • Goodman, Nelson, 1978,Ways of Worldmaking, Indianapolis:Hackett.
  • Goodman, Nelson and W. V. Quine, 1947, ‘Steps Towards aConstructive Nominalism’,Journal of Symbolic Logic,12: 105–122.
  • Goswick, Dana, 2018a, ‘The Hard Question forHylomorphism’,Metaphysics, 1: 52–62.
  • –––, 2018b, ‘Review ofOntology MadeEasy’,Philosophical Review, 127:145–149.
  • –––, 2023, ‘The Anti-Realist Boogeyman(and How to Avoid Him)’,Philosophia, 51:189–204.
  • Graham, Andrew, 2015, ‘From Four- toFive-Dimensionalism’,Ratio, 28: 14–28.
  • Grandy, Richard, 1973, ‘Reference, Meaning, andBelief’,The Journal of Philosophy, 70:439–452.
  • Grupp, Jeffrey, 2006, ‘Mereological Nihilism: QuantumAtomism and the Impossibility of Material Constitution’,Axiomathes, 16: 245–386.
  • Guillon, Jean-Baptiste, 2021, ‘Coincidence asParthood’,Synthese, 198: 4247–4276.
  • Hall, Geoffrey, 2022, ‘Is Consciousness Vague?’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 101: 670–684.
  • Harte, Verity, 2002,Plato on Parts and Wholes, Oxford:Clarendon Press.
  • Hawley, Katherine, 2001,How Things Persist, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2002, ‘Vagueness andExistence’,Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society,102: 125–140.
  • –––, 2004, ‘Borderline Simple or ExtremelySimple’,The Monist, 87: 385–404.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Principles of Composition andCriteria of Identity’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 83: 481–493.
  • Hawthorne, John, 2006,Metaphysical Essays, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Superficialism inOntology’, in David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman(eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.213–230.
  • Hawthorne, John and Andrew Cortens, 1995, ‘TowardsOntological Nihilism’,Philosophical Studies, 79:143–165.
  • Hawthorne, John and Michaelis Michael, 1996, ‘CompatibilistSemantics in Metaphysics: A Case Study’,AustralasianJournal of Philosophy, 74: 117–134.
  • Heil, John, 2003,From an Ontological Point of View,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Heller, Mark, 1984, ‘Temporal Parts of Four DimensionalObjects’,Philosophical Studies, 46:323–334.
  • –––, 1990,The Ontology of Physical Objects:Four-Dimensional Hunks of Matter, New York: Cambridge UniversityPress. “Temporal Parts of Four-Dimensional Objects” (Ch.1) is reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1993, ‘Varieties of FourDimensionalism’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy,71: 47–59.
  • –––, 2000, ‘Temporal Overlap Is NotCoincidence’,The Monist, 83: 362–380.
  • –––, 2008, ‘The Donkey Problem’,Philosophical Studies, 140: 83–101.
  • Hershenov, David, 2003, ‘Can There be Spatially CoincidentEntities of the Same Kind?’,Canadian Journal ofPhilosophy, 33: 1–22.
  • Hestevold, H. Scott, 1981, ‘Conjoining’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 41:371–385.
  • Hirsch, Eli, 1976, ‘Physical Identity’,ThePhilosophical Review, 85: 357–389.
  • –––, 1978, ‘A Sense of Unity’,The Journal of Philosophy, 75: 470–494. Reprinted inHirsch 2011.
  • –––, 1982,The Concept of Identity,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 1993,Dividing Reality, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 1999, ‘The Vagueness ofIdentity’,Philosophical Topics, 26: 139–159.Reprinted in Hirsch 2011.
  • –––, 2000, ‘Objectivity WithoutObjects’,Proceedings of the World Congress ofPhilosophy, 5: 189–197. Page references are to Hirsch2011.
  • –––, 2002a, ‘Against RevisionaryOntology’,Philosophical Topics, 30: 103–127.Reprinted in Hirsch 2011 and in Kim et. al. 2011.
  • –––, 2002b, ‘Quantifier Variance andRealism’,Philosophical Issues, 12: 51–73.Reprinted in Hirsch 2011.
  • –––, 2004a, ‘Comments on TheodoreSider’s Four Dimensionalism’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 68: 658–664. Reprinted in Hirsch2011.
  • –––, 2004b, ‘Sosa’s ExistentialRelativism’, in John Greco (ed.),Ernest Sosa and HisCritics, Malden: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 224–232. Pagereferences are to Hirsch 2011.
  • –––, 2005, ‘Physical-Object Ontology,Verbal Disputes, and Common Sense’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 70: 67–97. Reprinted in Hirsch2011.
  • –––, 2008a, ‘Language, Ontology, andStructure’,Noûs, 42: 509–528.
  • –––, 2008b, ‘Ontological Arguments:Interpretive Charity and Quantifier Variance’, in TheodoreSider, John Hawthorne, and Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.),ContemporaryDebates in Metaphysics, Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 367–381.Reprinted in Hirsch 2011.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Ontology and AlternativeLanguages’, in David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman(eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.231–259. Reprinted in Hirsch 2011.
  • –––, 2011,Quantifier Variance andRealism, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Charity to Charity’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 86:435–442.
  • Hobbes, Thomas, 1655, Part II ofDe Corpore(“Concerning Body”).
  • Hoffman, Joshua and Gary S. Rosenkrantz, 1997,Substance: ItsNature and Existence, New York: Routledge.
  • Hofweber, Thomas, 2016,Ontology and the Ambitions ofMetaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Replies to Bennett, Rayo, andSattig’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 94:488–504.
  • –––, 2019, ‘Empirical Evidence and theMetaphysics of Ordinary Objects’, in Javier Cumpa and BillBrewer (eds.),The Nature of Ordinary Objects, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, pp. 27–47.
  • Holden, Thomas, 2004,The Architecture of Matter, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • Horden, John, 2014, ‘Ontology in Plain English’,Philosophical Quarterly, 255: 225–242.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Devious Stipulations’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 10: 63–73.
  • Horgan, Terence, 1991, ‘Metaphysical Realism andPsychologistic Semantics’,Erkenntnis, 34:297–322.
  • –––, 1993, ‘On What ThereIsn’t’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,53: 693–700.
  • Horgan, Terence and Matjaž Potrč, 2000,‘Blobjectivism and Indirect Correspondence’,FactaPhilosophica, 2: 249–270.
  • –––, 2008,Austere Realism: ContextualSemantics Meets Minimal Ontology, Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Existence Monism TrumpsPriority Monism’, in Philip Goff (ed.),Spinoza onMonism, Palgrave-Macmillan, pp. 51–76.
  • Hossack, Keith, 2000, ‘Plurals and Complexes’,British Journal for Philosophy of Science, 51:411–443.
  • Howard-Snyder, Frances, 1997, ‘De Re Modality Entails De ReVagueness’, in Rea 1997a, pp. 290–301.
  • Hudson, Hud, 2000, ‘Universalism, Four Dimensionalism, andVagueness’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,60: 547–560.
  • –––, 2001,A Materialist Metaphysics of theHuman Person, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Confining Composition’,The Journal of Philosophy, 103: 631–651.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Simples and Gunk’,Philosophy Compass, 2: 291–302.
  • Hughes, Christopher, 1997, ‘Same-Kind Coincidence and theShip of Theseus’,Mind, 106: 53–67.
  • Inman, Ross, 2014, ‘Neo-Aristotelian Plenitude’,Philosophical Studies, 168: 583–597.
  • –––, 2018,Substance and the Fundamentalityof the Familiar, New York: Routledge.
  • Inman, Ross and Alexander Pruss, 2019, ‘On Christian Theismand Unrestricted Compoisition’,American PhilosophicalQuarterly, 56: 345–360.
  • Ioannou, Savvas, 2023, ‘Sentences Apparently AboutComposite Objects’,Metaphysica, 24:277–297.
  • Jackson, Brendan Balcerak, 2013, ‘Metaphysics, VerbalDisputes and the Limits of Charity’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 86: 412–434.
  • Jago, Mark, 2016, ‘Essence and the Grounding Problem’,in Mark Jago (ed.),Reality Making, Oxford University Press,pp. 99–120.
  • –––, forthcoming, ‘Knowing What ItIs’,Philosophical Studies.
  • Javier-Castellanos, A. Arturo, 2023, ‘Should the Number ofOverlapping Experiencers Count?’,Erkenntnis, 88:1767–1789.
  • Johnston, Mark, 1992, ‘Constitution Is Not Identity’,Mind, 101: 89–105.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Hylomorphism’,TheJournal of Philosophy, 103: 652–698.
  • –––, 2016, ‘The Personite Problem: ShouldPractical Reason Be Tabled?’,Noûs, 50:617–644.
  • Jones, Nicholaos, 2021, ‘Mereological Composition inAnalytic and Buddhist Perspective’,Journal of the AmericanPhilosophical Association, 7: 173–194.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Soteriological Mereologyin the Pāli Discourses, Buddhaghosa, and Huayan Buddhism’,Dao, 22: 117–143.
  • Jones, Nicholas K., 2015, ‘Multiple Constitution’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 9: 217–261.
  • Joyce, Richard, 2006,The Evolution of Morality,Cambridge: MIT Press.
  • Jubien, Michael, 1993,Ontology, Modality, and the Fallacy ofReference, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • –––, 2001, ‘Thinking about Things’,Philosophical Perspectives, 15: 1–15.
  • Kantin, Holly, 2020, ‘Why Compositional Nihilism DissolvesPuzzles’,Synthese, 197: 4319–4340.
  • Keller, John A., 2015, ‘Paraphrase, Semantics, andOntology’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 10:89–128.
  • Kelly, Thomas, 2008, ‘Common Sense as Evidence: AgainstRevisionary Ontology and Skepticism’,Midwest Studies inPhilosophy, 32: 53–78.
  • Kertész, Gergely and Daniel Kodaj, 2023, ‘In Defenseof Teleological Intuitions’,Philosophical Studies,180: 1421–1437.
  • Kim, Jaegwon, 1976, ‘Events as PropertyExemplifications’, in M. Brand and D. Walton (eds.),ActionTheory, Dordrecht: D. Reidel, pp. 159–177. Reprinted inLaurence and MacDonald 1998.
  • –––, 2005,Physicalism, or Something NearEnough, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Kim, Jaegwon, Daniel Z. Korman, and Ernest Sosa, 2011,Metaphysics: An Anthology, 2nd Edition, Oxford: BlackwellPublishing.
  • King, Jeffrey C., 2006, ‘Semantics for Monists’,Mind, 115: 1023–1058.
  • Kitamura, Naoaki, 2016, ‘Defending Priority Views from theGunk/Junk Argument’,Philosophia, 44:155–165.
  • Kitsik, Eve, 2020, ‘Explication as a Strategy forRevisionary Philosophy’,Synthese, 197:1035–1056.
  • Kleinschmidt, Shieva, 2021, ‘The Overlap Problem’,Philosophical Studies, 178: 1801–1827.
  • Kment, Boris, 2014,Modality and Explanatory Reasoning,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Koons, Robert C. and Timothy H. Pickavance, 2017,The Atlas ofReality, Malden: Wiley Blackwell.
  • Korman, Daniel Z., 2008a, ‘Review ofAustereRealism’,Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
  • –––, 2008b, ‘Unrestricted Composition andRestricted Quantification’,Philosophical Studies, 140:319–334.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Eliminativism and theChallenge from Folk Belief’,Noûs, 43:242–264.
  • –––, 2010b, ‘Strange Kinds, FamiliarKinds, and the Charge of Arbitrariness’,Oxford Studies inMetaphysics, 5: 119–144. Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 2011, ‘Review ofFamiliar Objectsand Their Shadows’,Notre Dame PhilosophicalReviews.
  • –––, 2014a, ‘Debunking Perceptual Beliefsabout Ordinary Objects’,Philosophers’ Imprint,14: 1–21.
  • –––, 2014b, ‘The Vagueness ArgumentAgainst Abstract Artifacts’,Philosophical Studies,167: 57–71.
  • –––, 2015a, ‘Fundamental Quantificationand the Language of the Ontology Room’,Noûs, 49:298–321.
  • –––, 2015b,Objects: Nothing Out of theOrdinary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2015c, ‘Review ofThe DoubleLives of Objects’,Notre Dame PhilosophicalReviews.
  • –––, 2019a, ‘Debunking Arguments inMetaethics and Metaphysics’, in Alvin Goldman and BrianMcLaughlin (eds.),Metaphysics and Cognitive Science, Oxford:Oxford University Press, pp. 337–363.
  • –––, 2019b, ‘Easy Ontology WithoutDeflationary Metaontology’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 99: 236–243.
  • –––, 2020, ‘Conservatism, Counterexamples,and Debunking’,Analysis, 80: 558–574.
  • –––, 2024a ‘Fictionalism,Indifferentism, and Ontology’, in Andreas Stokke (ed.),Festschrift for Matti Eklund, Uppsala: DiVa Archive, pp.1–16.
  • –––, 2024b, ‘Why Care About What ThereIs?’,Mind, 133: 428–451.
  • Korman, Daniel Z. and Chad Carmichael, 2016,‘Composition’,Oxford Handbooks Online.
  • –––, 2017, ‘What Do the Folk Think AboutComposition and Does It Matter?’, in David Rose (ed.),Experimental Metaphysics, London: Bloomsbury,pp.187–206.
  • Koslicki, Kathrin, 2003, ‘The Crooked Path from Vagueness toFour-Dimensionalism’,Philosophical Studies, 114:107–134.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Towards a Neo-AristotelianMereology’,Dialectica, 61: 127–159.
  • –––, 2008,The Structure of Objects,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2018a,Form, Matter, Substance,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2018b, ‘Towards a HylomorphicSolution to the Grounding Problem’,Royal Institute ofPhilosophy Supplement, 82: 333–364.
  • Kovacs, David Mark, 2010, ‘Is There a Conservative Solutionto the Many Thinkers Problem?’,Ratio, 23:275–290.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Self-Made People’,Mind, 125: 1071–1099.
  • –––, 2021a, ‘How to be an UncompromisingRevisionary Ontologist’,Synthese, 198:2129–2152.
  • –––, 2021b, ‘Intuitions about Objects:From Teleology to Elimination’,Mind, 130:199–213.
  • –––, 2022, ‘Self-Making andSubpeople’,Journal of Philosophy, 119:461–488.
  • –––, forthcoming a, ‘Against the StatusResponse to the Argument from Vagueness’,Synthese.
  • –––, forthcoming b, ‘PregnantThinkers’,Philosophical Quarterly.
  • Kriegel, Uriah, 2011, ‘Two Defenses of Common-SenseOntology’,Dialectica­, 65: 177–204.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Composition as a SecondaryQuality’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 89:359–383.
  • –––, 2013, ‘The Epistemological Challengeof Revisionary Metaphysics’,Philosophers’Imprint, 13: 1–30.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Nominalism and MaterialPlenitude’,Res Philosophica, 98: 89–112.
  • –––, 2022, ‘Egalitarian vs. ElitistPlenitude’,Philosophical Studies, 179:3055–3070.
  • Kripke, Saul, 1971, ‘Identity and Necessity’, inMilton K. Kunitz (ed.),Identity and Individuation, New York:New York University Press, pp. 135–164. Reprinted in Kim et al.2011.
  • Kurtsal, İrem, 2010, ‘Three-Dimensionalist’sSemantic Solution to Diachronic Vagueness’,PhilosophicalStudies, 150: 79–96.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Almost-Ontology: WhyEpistemicism Cannot Help Us Avoid Unrestricted Composition orDiachronic Plenitude’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly,95: 130–139.
  • –––, 2019, ‘The Sorites Paradox inMetaphysics’, in Sergi Oms and Elia Zardini (eds.),TheSorites Paradox, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.207–228.
  • –––, 2021, ‘PersistenceEgalitarianism’,Res Philosophica, 98:63–88.
  • –––, 2022, ‘Self-Determination inPlenitude’,Erkenntnis, 87: 2397–2418.
  • Lando, Giorgio, 2017,Mereology: A PhilosophicalIntroduction, London: Bloomsbury.
  • Laurence, Stephen and Cynthia MacDonald, 1998,ContemporaryReadings in the Foundations of Metaphysics, Oxford:Blackwell.
  • Le Bihan, Baptiste, 2013, ‘Why a Gunk World is Compatiblewith Nihilism about Objects’,Studia PhilosophicaEstonica, 6: 1–14.
  • –––, 2015, ‘No Physical Particles for aDispositional Monist’,Philosophical Papers, 44:207–232.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Super-Relationism: CombiningEliminativism about Objects and Relationism about Spacetime’,Philosophical Studies, 173: 2151–2172.
  • LeBrun, Alex, 2021, ‘What Are Empirical Consequences?On Dispensability and CompositeObjects’,Synthese, 199: 13201–13223.
  • Lechthaler, Manuel, 2021, ‘No Universalism without Gunk?Composition as Identity and the Universality of Identity’,Synthese, 198: 4441–4452.
  • Leonard, Henry S. and Nelson Goodman, 1940, ‘The Calculus ofIndividuals and Its Uses’,Journal of Symbolic Logic,5: 45–55.
  • Leslie, Sarah-Jane, 2011, ‘Essence, Plenitude, andParadox’,Philosophical Perspectives, 25:277–296.
  • Leśniewski, Stanisław, 1916/1922, ‘Foundations ofthe General Theory of Sets I’, in S. J. Surma, J. Srzednicki, D.I. Barnett, and F. V. Rickey (eds.),Collected Works (Volume1), Dordrecht: Kluwer, pp. 129–173.
  • Lewis, David, 1971, ‘Counterparts of Persons and TheirBodies’,The Journal of Philosophy, 68:203–211.
  • –––, 1974, ‘Radical Interpretation’,Synthese, 23: 331–344.
  • –––, 1976, ‘Survival and Identity’,in hisPhilosophical Papers (Volume 1), Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, pp. 55–70. Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1983, ‘New Work for a Theory ofUniversals’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 61:343–377. Reprinted in Lewis 1999 and in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1984, ‘Putnam’s Paradox’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 62: 221–236.Reprinted in Lewis 1999.
  • –––, 1986,On the Plurality of Worlds,Malden: Blackwell.
  • –––, 1988, ‘Vague Identity: EvansMisunderstood’,Analysis, 48: 128–130.
  • –––, 1991,Parts of Classes, Cambridge:Blackwell.
  • –––, 1993, ‘Many, But Almost One’,in Keith Campbell, John Bacon and Lloyd Reinhardt (eds.),Ontology, Causality, and Mind, Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, pp. 23–42. Reprinted in Lewis 1999 and in Kimet al. 2011. Page references are to Lewis 1999.
  • –––, 1999,Papers in Metaphysics andEpistemology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Liebesman, David, 2016, ‘Counting as a Type ofMeasuring’,Philosophers' Imprint, 16:1–25.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Double-Counting and theProblem of the Many’,Philosophical Studies, 178:209–234.
  • Liebesman, David and Matti Eklund, 2007, ‘Sider onExistence’,Noûs, 41: 519–528.
  • Liggins, David, 2008, ‘Nihilism withoutSelf-Contradiction’,Royal Institute of PhilosophySupplement, 62: 177–196.
  • Linnebo, Øystein, 2024, ‘Eklund, Maximalism, andthe Problem of Incompatible Objects’, in Stokke, Andreas(Ed.),Festschrift for Matti Eklund.
  • Long, Joseph, 2019, ‘One’s an Illusion: Organisms,Reference, and Non-Eliminative Nihilism’,Philosophia,47: 459–475.
  • Longenecker, Michael, 2018, ‘Non-Concrete Parts of MaterialObjects’,Synthese, 195: 5091–5111.
  • López de Sa, Dan, 2006, ‘Is “Everything”Precise?’,Dialectica, 60: 397–409.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Lewis vs Lewis on the Problemof the Many’,Synthese, 191: 1105–1117.
  • Loss, Roberto, 2018a, ‘Against ‘Against ‘AgainstVague Existence’’’,Oxford Studies inMetaphysics, 11: 278–287.
  • –––, 2018b, ‘A Sudden Collapse toNihilism’,Philosophical Quarterly, 68:370–375.
  • Lowe, E. J., 1982, ‘The Paradox of the 1,001 Cats’,Analysis, 42: 27–30.
  • –––, 1983a, ‘Instantiation, Identity andConstitution’,Philosophical Studies, 44:45–59.
  • –––, 1983b, ‘On the Identity ofArtifacts’,The Journal of Philosophy, 80:220–231.
  • –––, 1989,Kinds of Being, Oxford:Basil Blackwell.
  • –––, 1994, ‘Vague Identity and QuantumIndeterminacy’,Analysis, 54: 110–114.
  • –––, 1995, ‘The Problem of the Many andthe Vagueness of Constitution’,Analysis, 55:179–182.
  • –––, 2000,An Introduction to the Philosophyof Mind, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • –––, 2002, ‘Material Coincidence and theCinemato-Graphic Fallacy: A Response to Olson’,Philosophical Quarterly, 52: 369–372.
  • –––, 2003a, ‘In Defense of Moderate-SizedSpecimens of Dry Goods’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 67: 704–710.
  • –––, 2003b, ‘Substantial Change andSpatiotemporal Coincidence’,Ratio, 16:140–160.
  • –––, 2005a, ‘How are Ordinary ObjectsPossible?’,The Monist, 88: 510–533.
  • –––, 2005b, ‘Vagueness andEndurance’,Analysis, 65: 104–112.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Review ofMetaphysicalEssays’,Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
  • –––, 2009,More Kinds of Being, Malden:Wiley-Blackwell.
  • –––, 2011, ‘Vagueness andMetaphysics’, in G. Ronzitti (ed.),Vagueness: A Guide,Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 19–53.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Against Monism’, inPhilip Goff (ed.),Spinoza on Monism, Palgrave-Macmillan, pp.92–112.
  • –––, 2013a, ‘Mereological Extensionality,Supplementation, and Material Constitution’,TheMonist, 96: 131–148.
  • –––, 2013b, ‘Ontological Vagueness,Existence Monism and Metaphysical Realism’,Metaphysica, 14: 265–274.
  • Mackie, Penelope, 1993, ‘Ordinary Language and MetaphysicalCommitment’,Analysis, 53: 243–251.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Coincidence and ModalPredicates’,Analysis, 67: 21–31.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Coincidence andIdentity’,Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement,62: 151–176.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Persistence andModality’,Synthese, 198: 1425–1438.
  • Madden, Rory, 2019, ‘How Can Thought Select BetweenCoincident Material Things?’, in Javier Cumpa and Bill Brewer(eds.),The Nature of Ordinary Objects, Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, pp. 149–172.
  • Magidor, Ofra, 2015, ‘Why Neither Diachronic UniversalismNor the Argument from Vagueness Establish Perdurantism’,Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 45: 113–126.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Endurantism vs. Perdurantism?:A Debate Reconsidered’,Noûs, 50:509–532.
  • Markosian, Ned, 1998a, ‘Brutal Composition’,Philosophical Studies, 92: 211–249.
  • –––, 1998b, ‘Simples’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 76: 213–228.
  • –––, 2000, ‘What Are PhysicalObjects?’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,61: 375–395.
  • –––, 2004, ‘Two Arguments fromSider’s “Four-Dimensionalism”’,Philosophyand Phenomenological Research, 68: 665–673.
  • –––, 2005, ‘Against OntologicalFundamentalism’,Facta Philosophica, 7:69–83.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Restricted Composition’,in Theodore Sider, John Hawthorne, and Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.),Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics, Malden: Blackwell, pp.341–364.
  • –––, 2010, ‘Identifying the Problem ofPersonal Identity’, In Joseph Keim Campbell, MichaelO’Rourke, and Harry Silverstein (eds.),Time andIdentity, MIT Press, pp. 127–148.
  • –––, 2014, ‘A Spatial Approach toMereology’, in Shieva Kleinschmidt (ed.),Mereology andLocation, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 69–90.
  • –––, 2015, ‘The Right Stuff’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 93: 665–687.
  • McDaniel, Kris, 2001, ‘Tropes and Ordinary PhysicalObjects’,Philosophical Studies, 104:269–290.
  • –––, 2004, ‘Modal Realism withOverlap’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 82:137–152.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Extended Simples’,Philosophical Studies, 133: 131–141.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Against Composition asIdentity’,Analysis, 68: 128–133.
  • –––, 2010a, ‘Being and AlmostNothingness’,Noûs, 44: 628–649.
  • –––, 2010b, ‘Composition as Identity DoesNot Entail Universalism’,Erkenntnis, 73:97–100.
  • –––, 2017,The Fragmentation of Being,Oxford University Press.
  • McGee, Vann and Brian McLaughlin, 2000, ‘Lessons of theMany’,Philosophical Topics, 28: 129–151.
  • McGrath, Matthew, 1998, ‘Van Inwagen on Universalism’,Analysis, 58: 116–121.
  • –––, 2005, ‘No Objects, NoProblem?’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 83:457–486.
  • –––, 2008, ‘Conciliatory Metaontology andthe Vindication of Common Sense’,Noûs, 42:482–508.
  • McKay, Thomas J., 2006,Plural Predication, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • McKenzie, Kerry and F. A. Muller, 2017, ‘Bound States andthe Special Composition Question’, in Michela Massimi et al.(eds.),EPSA15 Selected Papers, Springer,pp. 233–241.
  • McKinnon, Neil, 2002, ‘Supervaluations and the Problem ofthe Many’,Philosophical Quarterly, 52:320–359.
  • McQueen, Kelvin J. and Tsuchiya, Naotsugu, 2023, ‘WhenDo Parts Form Wholes? Integrated Information as the Restriction onMereological Composition’,Neuroscience ofConsciousness, 2023(1): 1–11.
  • Merricks, Trenton, 2000, ‘‘No Statues’’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 78: 47–52.
  • –––, 2001,Objects and Persons, Oxford:Oxford University Press. “Epiphenomenalism andEliminativism” (Ch. 3) is reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 2003, ‘Replies’,Philosophyand Phenomenological Research, 67: 727–744.
  • –––, 2005, ‘Composition andVagueness’,Mind, 114: 615–637.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Remarks on Vagueness andArbitrariness’,Mind, 116: 115–119.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Review ofStructure ofObjects’,The Journal of Philosophy, 106:301–307.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Do Ordinary Objects Exist?No.’, in Elizabeth Barnes (ed.),Current Controversies inMetaphysics, Routledge, pp. 135–148.
  • Merrill, G. H., 1980, ‘The Model-Theoretic Argument againstRealism’,Philosophy of Science, 47: 69–81.
  • Miller, Kristie, 2005, ‘Blocking the Path from Vagueness toFour Dimensionalism’,Ratio, 18: 317–331.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Defending Contingentism inMetaphysics’,Dialectica, 63: 23–49.
  • –––, 2010, ‘The Existential Quantifier,Composition and Contingency’,Erkenntnis, 73:211–235.
  • Miller, Kristie & Johann Hariman, 2017, ‘What is anErsatz Part?’,Grazer Philosophische Studien, 94:524–551.
  • Mokriski, David, 2021, ‘Conciliatory Metaontology,Permissive Ontology, and Nature’sJoints’,Synthese, 199: 2335–2351.
  • Mooney, Justin, 2023a, ‘Becoming aStatue’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 101:228–239.
  • –––, 2023b, ‘Criteria of Identitywithout Sortals’,Noûs, 57:722–739.
  • –––, 2024, ‘The Matter ofCoincidence’,Pacific PhilosophicalQuarterly, 105: 98–114.
  • –––, forthcoming, ‘Ordinary UndetachedParts’,Synthese.
  • Moran, Alex, 2018, ‘The Paradox of Decrease and DependentParts’,Ratio, 31: 273–284.
  • Morreau, Michael, 2002, ‘What Vague Objects are Like’,Journal of Philosophy, 99: 333–361.
  • Moyer, Mark, 2006, ‘Statues and Lumps: A StrangeCoincidence’,Synthese, 148: 401–423.
  • –––, 2008, ‘A Survival Guide toFission’,Philosophical Studies, 141:299–322.
  • Needham, Paul, 2017,Macroscopic Metaphysics:Middle-Sized Objects and Longish Processes, Cham, Switzerland:Springer International Publishing.
  • Newman, Andrew, 2013, ‘On the Constitution of Solid Objectsout of Atoms’,The Monist, 96: 149–171.
  • Nolan, Daniel, 2005,David Lewis, London: Acumen.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Vagueness, Multiplicity, andParts’,Noûs, 40: 716–737.
  • –––, 2010, ‘Metaphysical Language,Ordinary Language and Peter van Inwagen’sMaterialBeings’,Humana.Mente, 13: 237–246.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Balls and All’, inShieva Kleinschmidt (ed.),Mereology and Location, Oxford:Oxford University Press, pp. 91–116.
  • Noonan, Harold W., 1988, ‘Reply to Lowe on Ships andStructures’,Analysis, 48: 221–223.
  • –––, 1991, ‘Indeterminate Identity,Contingent Identity and Abelardian Predicates’,Philosophical Quarterly, 41: 183–193.
  • –––, 1992, ‘Review ofMaterialBeings’,Philosophical Quarterly, 42:239–242.
  • –––, 1993, ‘Constitution isIdentity’,Mind, 102: 133–146.
  • –––, 1999a, ‘Identity, Constitution, andMicrophysical Supervenience’,Proceedings of theAristotelian Society, 99: 273–288.
  • –––, 1999b, ‘Tibbles the Cat: Reply toBurke’,Philosophical Studies, 95: 215–218.
  • –––, 2010, ‘A Flaw in Sider’sVagueness Argument for Unrestricted Mereological Composition’,Analysis, 70: 669–672.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Tollensing van Inwagen’,Philosophia, 42: 1055–1061.
  • –––, 2015, ‘Against StrongPluralism’,Philosophia, 43: 1081–1087.
  • –––, 2021, ‘The Great WesternRailway’,Philosophia, 49: 741–744
  • –––, 2024, ‘There Are More, or Fewer,Things than Most of Us Think’,Metaphysica, 25:193–203.
  • O’Connor, Timothy, 2007, ‘Review ofAll the Powerin the World’,Notre Dame PhilosophicalReviews.
  • Oddie, Graham, 1982, ‘Armstrong on the Eleatic Principle andAbstract Entities’,Philosophical Studies, 41:285–295.
  • Oderberg, David, 1996, ‘Coincidence Under a Sortal’,Philosophical Review, 105: 145–171.
  • Olson, Eric T., 1995, ‘Why I Have no Hands’,Theoria, 61: 182–197.
  • –––, 1996, ‘Composition andCoincidence’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 77:374–403.
  • –––, 2001, ‘Material Coincidence and theIndiscernibility Problem’,Philosophical Quarterly, 51:337–355.
  • –––, 2002, ‘The Ontology of MaterialObjects: Critical Notice ofObjects and Persons’,Philosophical Books, 39: 252–254.
  • –––, 2007,What Are We?, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press.
  • –––, 2010, ‘Ethics and the GenerousOntology’,Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 31:259–270.
  • Openshaw, James, 2021, ‘Thinking about theMany’,Synthese, 199: 2863–2882.
  • Orensanz, Martin, 2022, ‘Ordinary Objects and theOverdetermination Argument’,Cosmos andHistory:The Journal of Natural and SocialPhilosophy, 18: 445–456.
  • Osborne, Robert C., 2016, ‘Debunking Rationalist Defenses ofCommon-Sense Ontology: An Empirical Approach’,Review ofPhilosophy and Psychology, 7: 197–221.
  • Papineau, David, 1993,Philosophical Naturalism, Oxford:Blackwell.
  • Parfit, Derek, 1971, ‘Personal Identity’,Philosophical Review, 80: 3–27.
  • Parsons, Josh, 2004, ‘Dion, Theon, and DAUP’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 85: 85–91.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Conceptual Conservatism andContingent Composition’,Inquiry, 56:327–339.
  • Parsons, Terence, 1987, ‘Entities Without Identity’,Philosophical Perspectives, 1: 1–19.
  • Parsons, Terence and Peter Woodruff, 1994, ‘WorldlyIndeterminacy of Identity’,Proceedings of the AristotelianSociety, 95: 171–191.
  • Paul, L. A., 2002, ‘Logical Parts’,Noûs, 36: 578–596.
  • –––, 2004, ‘The Context ofEssence’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 82:170–184.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Coincidence as Overlap’,Noûs, 40: 623–659.
  • –––, 2010, ‘The Puzzles of MaterialConstitution’,Philosophy Compass, 5:579–590.
  • Payton, Jonathan D., 2021, ‘Composition as Identity,Now with all the Pluralities You CouldWant’,Synthese, 199:8047–8068.
  • –––, 2022, ‘CountingComposites’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 100: 695–710.
  • Pearce, Kenneth L., 2017, ‘Mereological Idealism’, inTyron Goldschmidt and Kenneth L. Pearce (eds.),Idealism: NewEssays in Metaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.200–216.
  • Perry, John, 1970, ‘The Same F’,PhilosophicalReview, 79: 181–200.
  • Petersen, Steve, 2019, ‘Composition as Pattern’,Philosophical Studies, 176: 1119–1139.
  • Pickel, Bryan, 2010, ‘There is no ‘Is’ ofConstitution’,Philosophical Studies, 147:193–211.
  • Piras, Nicola, 2019, ‘Spatial Fictionalism: A Solutionof the Grounding Problem’, in Davies, Richard(ed.),Natural and Artifactual Objects in ContemporaryMetaphysics: Exercises in Analytic Ontology, New York, NY:Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 58–79.
  • Pitkovski, Eli, 2024, ‘Semanticism and OntologicalCommitment’,Erkenntnis, 89: 27–43.
  • Potrč, Matjaž, 2002, ‘Non-Arbitrariness ofComposition and Particularism’,Grazer PhilosophischeStudien, 63: 197–215.
  • Price, Marjorie S., 1977, ‘Identity Through Time’,The Journal of Philosophy, 74: 201–217.
  • Putnam, Hilary, 1981,Reason, Truth and History,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • –––, 1987, ‘Truth and Convention: OnDavidson’s Refutation of Conceptual Relativism’,Dialectica, 41: 69–77.
  • –––, 1994, ‘The Question ofRealism’, in hisWords and Life, Cambridge: HarvardUniversity Press, pp. 295–312.
  • Quine, W. V., 1953, ‘Identity, Ostension andHypostasis’, in hisFrom a Logical Point of View,Cambridge: Harvard University Press, pp. 65–79. Reprinted in Kimet al. 2011.
  • –––, 1981a,Theories and Things,Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • –––, 1981b, ‘What Price Bivalence?’,The Journal of Philosophy, 78: 90–95. Reprinted inQuine 1981a.
  • Raab, Jonas, 2021, ‘The Unbearable Circularity of EasyOntology’,Synthese, 199: 3527–3556.
  • Rabin, Gabriel O., 2023, ‘Existence and the ExistentialQuantifier’,Metaphilosophy, 54: 352–358.
  • Rea, Michael C., 1995, ‘The Problem of MaterialConstitution’,Philosophical Review, 104:525–552.
  • –––, 1997a,Material Constitution,Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • –––, 1997b, ‘Supervenience andCo-Location’,American Philosophical Quarterly, 34:367–375.
  • –––, 1998, ‘In Defense of MereologicalUniversalism’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 58: 347–360.
  • –––, 1999, ‘McGrath onUniversalism’,Analysis, 59: 201–204.
  • –––, 2000, ‘Constitution and KindMembership’,Philosophical Studies, 97:169–193.
  • –––, 2001, ‘How to be an EleaticMonist’,Philosophical Perspectives, 15:129–151.
  • –––, 2002,World Without Design,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Remhof, Justin, 2017,Nietzsche’s Constructivism: AMetaphysics of Material Objects, New York: Routledge.
  • Renz, Graham, 2016, ‘It’s All in your Head: a Solutionto the Problem of Object Coincidence’,Philosophia, 44:1387–1407.
  • Rettler, Bradley, 2016, ‘The General Truthmaker View ofOntological Commitment’,Philosophical Studies, 173:1405–1425.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Mereological Nihilism andPuzzles about Material Objects’,Pacific PhilosophicalQuarterly, 99: 842–868.
  • –––, 2019, ‘Quantification in the OntologyRoom’,Dialectica, 73: 563–585.
  • Richard, Mark, 2006, ‘Context, Vagueness, andOntology’, in Patrick Greenough and Michael Lynch (eds.),Truth and Realism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.162–174.
  • Robinson, Denis, 1985, ‘Can Amoebae Divide WithoutMultiplying?’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 63:299–319.
  • Robertson Ishii, Teresa, 2022, ‘Everything But theKitchen Sink: How (Not) to Give a Plenitudinarian Solution to theParadox of Flexible Origin Essentialism’,PhilosophicalStudies, 179: 133–161.
  • Robertson Ishii, Teresa and Salmón,Nathon, 2020, ‘Some Highs and Lows of Hylomorphism: Ona Paradox about Property Abstraction’,PhilosophicalStudies, 177: 1549–1563.
  • Roelofs, Luke, 2022, ‘No Such Thing as Too ManyMinds’,Australasian Journal ofPhilosophy, 102: 131–146.
  • Rose, David, 2019, ‘Cognitive Science for theRevisionary Metaphysician’, in Alvin I. Goldman and Brian P.McLaughlin (eds.),Metaphysics and Cognitive Science,pp. 364–383.
  • –––, 2021, ‘MentalizingObjects’,Oxford Studies in ExperimentalPhilosophy, 4: 182–213.
  • Rose, David and Jonathan Schaffer, 2017, ‘Folk Mereology isTeleological’,Noûs, 51: 238–270.
  • Rosen, Gideon, 2006, ‘The Limits of Contingency’, inFraser MacBride (ed.),Identity and Modality, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, pp. 13–39.
  • Rosen, Gideon and Cian Dorr, 2002, ‘Composition asFiction’, in Richard M. Gale (ed.),The Blackwell Guide toMetaphysics, Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 151–174.
  • Rosenberg, Jay F., 1993, ‘Comments on Peter vanInwagen’s Material Beings’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 53: 701–708.
  • Ruben, David-Hillel, 2021, ‘Collocation andConstitution’,Metaphysica, 22:251–261.
  • Russell, Jeff, 2017, ‘Composition asAbstraction’,Journal of Philosophy, 114:453–470.
  • Saenz, Noël B., 2015, ‘A Grounding Solution to theGrounding Problem’,Philosophical Studies, 172:2193–2214.
  • –––, 2018, ‘Sums and Grounding’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 96: 102–117.
  • Salmon, Nathan, 1981,Reference and Essence, Princeton:Princeton University Press.
  • Sandgren, Alexander, 2023, ‘Thought and Talk in aGenerous World’,Ergo: An Open Access Journal ofPhilosophy, 9: 49.
  • Sanford, David H., 1979, ‘Nostalgia for the Ordinary:Comments on Papers by Unger and Wheeler’,Synthese, 41:175–184.
  • –––, 1993, ‘The Problem of the Many, ManyComposition Questions, and Naive Mereology’,Noûs, 27: 219–228.
  • Sanson, David, 2016, ‘Worlds Enough for Junk’,ResPhilosophica, 93: 45–62.
  • Sattig, Thomas, 2010a, ‘Compatibilism aboutCoincidence’,The Philosophical Review, 119:273–313.
  • –––, 2010b, ‘Many asOne’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 5:145–178.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Vague Objects and the Problemof the Many’,Metaphysica, 14:211–223.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Pluralism andDeterminism’,Journal of Philosophy, 111:135–150.
  • –––, 2015,The Double Lives of Objects,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Metaphysical Ambitions in theOntology of Objects’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 94: 481–487.
  • Saucedo, Raúl, 2011, ‘Parthood and Location’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 6: 223–284.
  • Schaffer, Jonathan, 2007, ‘From Nihilism to Monism’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 85: 175–191.
  • –––, 2009a, ‘The Deflationary Metaontologyof Thomasson’sOrdinary Objects’,Philosophical Books, 50: 142–157.
  • –––, 2009b, ‘On What Grounds What’,in David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman (eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.347–383.
  • –––, 2010, ‘Monism: The Priority of theWhole’,Philosophical Review, 119: 31–76.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Why the World Has Parts: Replyto Horgan and Potrč’, in Philip Goff (ed.),Spinoza onMonism, Palgrave-Macmillan, pp. 77–91.
  • Schwaninger, Artuher C., 2022, ‘Predicting Ordinary Objectsinto the World’,Philosophical Psychology, 37:2134–2157
  • Schwartz, Stephen P., 2009, ‘The Essence ofEssence’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 87:609–623.
  • Schwarz, Wolfgang, 2014, ‘Counterpart Theory and the Paradoxof Occasional Identity’,Mind, 123:1057–1094.
  • Shagrir, Oron, 2002, ‘Global Supervenience, CoincidentEntities, and Anti-Individualism’,PhilosophicalStudies, 109: 171–196.
  • Shoemaker, Sydney, 1979, ‘Identity, Properties, andCausality’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 4:321–342.
  • –––, 1988, ‘On What There Are’,Philosophical Topics, 16: 201–223.
  • –––, 2012, ‘Coincidence Through Thick andThin’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 7:227–253.
  • Shorter, J. M., 1977, ‘On Coinciding in Space andTime’,Philosophy, 52: 399–408.
  • Sidelle, Alan, 1989,Necessity, Essence, and Individuation: aDefense of Conventionalism, Ithaca: Cornell UniversityPress.
  • –––, 1992a, ‘Identity andIdentity-Like’,Philosophical Topics, 20:269–292.
  • –––, 1992b, ‘Rigidity, Ontology, andSemantic Structure’,The Journal of Philosophy, 89:410–430.
  • –––, 1998, ‘A Sweater Unraveled: FollowingOne Thread of Thought for Avoiding Coincident Entities’,Noûs, 32: 423–448.
  • –––, 2002, ‘Is There a True Metaphysics ofMaterial Objects?’,Philosophical Issues, 12:118–145.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Conventionalism and theContingency of Conventions’,Noûs, 43:224–241.
  • –––, 2010, ‘Modality and Objects’,Philosophical Quarterly, 60: 109–125.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Does Hylomorphism Offer aDistinctive Solution to the Grounding Problem?’,Analysis, 74: 397–404.
  • –––, 2016, ‘Coincidence: The GroundingProblem, Object-Specifying Principles, and Some Consequences’,Philosophical Papers, 45: 497–528.
  • Sider, Theodore, 1993, ‘Van Inwagen and the Possibility ofGunk’,Analysis, 53: 285–289.
  • –––, 1996, ‘All the World’s aStage’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 74:433–453. Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1997, ‘Four-Dimensionalism’,Philosophical Review, 106: 197–231.
  • –––, 2001a,Four-Dimensionalism,Oxford: Oxford University Press. “The Argument fromVagueness” (§4.9) is reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 2001b, ‘Maximality and IntrinsicProperties’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,63: 357–364.
  • –––, 2003a, ‘Against VagueExistence’,Philosophical Studies, 114:135–146.
  • –––, 2003b, ‘What’s So Bad AboutOverdetermination’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 67: 719–726.
  • –––, 2004, ‘Replies to Gallois, Hirsch andMarkosian’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,58: 674–687.
  • –––, 2007a, ‘Against Monism’,Analysis, 67: 1–7.
  • –––, 2007b, ‘Parthood’,Philosophical Review, 116: 51–91.
  • –––, 2008a, ‘Temporal Parts’, inTheodore Sider, John Hawthorne, and Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.),Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics, Malden: Blackwell, pp.241–262.
  • –––, 2008b, ‘Yet Another Paper on theSupervenience Argument Against Coincident Entities’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 77:613–624.
  • –––, 2009a, ‘Against Vague and UnnaturalExistence: Reply to Liebesman and Eklund’,Noûs,43: 557–567.
  • –––, 2009b, ‘Ontological Realism’,in David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman (eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.384–423.
  • –––, 2011,Writing the Book of theWorld, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Against Parthood’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 8: 237–293.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Hirsch’s Attack onOntologese’,Noûs, 48: 565–572.
  • Siderits, Mark, 2003,Personal Identity and BuddhistPhilosophy: Empty Persons, Burlington: Ashgate.
  • –––, 2007,Buddhism as Philosophy,Indianapolis: Hackett.
  • Silva, Paul, 2013, ‘Ordinary Objects and Series-StyleAnswers to the Special Composition Question’,PacificPhilosophical Quarterly, 94: 69–88.
  • Silver, Kenneth, 2020, ‘Causal Exclusion and OnticVagueness’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 100:56–69.
  • Simon, Jonathan A., 2017a, ‘The Hard Problem of theMany’,Philosophical Perspectives, 31:449–468.
  • –––, 2017b, ‘Vagueness and Zombies: Why‘Phenomenally Conscious’ Has No Borderline Cases’,Philosophical Studies, 174: 2105–2123.
  • Simons, Peter, 1985, ‘Coincidence of Things of aKind’,Mind, 94: 70–75.
  • –––, 1987,Parts: A Study in Ontology,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Real Wholes, Real Parts:Mereology Without Algebra’,The Journal of Philosophy,103: 597–613.
  • Skiles, Alexander, 2015, ‘Against GroundingNecessitarianism’,Erkenntnis, 80: 717–751.
  • Smith, Barry, 2001, ‘Fiat Objects’,Topoi,20: 131–148.
  • Smith, Deborah, 2019, ‘Gunky Objects, Junky Worlds, and WeakMereological Universalism’,Erkenntnis, 84:41–55.
  • Smith, Donald, 2006, ‘The Vagueness Argument forMereological Universalism’,Pacific PhilosophicalQuarterly, 87: 357–368.
  • Smith, Nicholas J. J., 2005, ‘A Plea for Things That Are NotQuite All There’,The Journal of Philosophy, 102:381–421.
  • Sosa, Ernest, 1987, ‘Subjects Among Other Things’,Philosophical Perspectives, 1: 155–187.
  • –––, 1999, ‘Existential Relativity’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 23: 132–143. Reprintedin Kim et al. 2011.
  • Spencer, Joshua, 2012, ‘All Things Must Pass Away’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 7: 67–92.
  • –––, 2017, ‘Counting on Strong Compositionas Identity to Settle the Special Composition Question’,Erkenntnis, 82: 857–872.
  • –––, 2020, ‘The Limits ofNeo‐Aristotelian Plenitude’,Pacific PhilosophicalQuarterly, 101: 74–92.
  • –––, 2021, ‘On the Explanatory Demands ofthe Special Composition Question’,Synthese, 198:4375–4388.
  • –––, 2023, ‘A Special CompositionPuzzle’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 13:51–68.
  • Spolaore, Giuseppe, 2012, ‘Not Just a Coincidence:Conditional Counter-examples to Locke’s Thesis’,Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, 1: 108–115.
  • Spolaore, Giuseppe and Pierdaniele Giaretta, 2018,‘Michelangelo’s Puzzle’,Philosophia, 46:453–464.
  • Stalnaker, Robert, 1988, ‘Vague Identity’, in David F.Austin (ed.),Philosophical Analysis, Dordrecht: Kluwer, pp.349–360. Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • Steen, Mark, 2008, ‘Chisholm’s Changing Conception ofOrdinary Objects’,Grazer Philosophische Studien, 76:1–56.
  • Steen, Mark, 2017, ‘Temporally RestrictedComposition’,Croatian Journal of Philosophy, 17:431–440.
  • Stone, Jim, 2002, ‘Why Sortal Essentialism Cannot SolveChrysippus’s Puzzle’,Analysis, 62:216–223.
  • Street, Sharon, 2006, ‘A Darwinian Dilemma for RealistTheories of Value’,Philosophical Studies, 127:109–166.
  • Strohminger, Margot, 2013, ‘Modal Humeanism and Argumentsfrom Possibility’,Proceedings of the AristotelianSociety, 113: 391–401.
  • Sud, Rohan, 2023, ‘Quantifier Variance, VagueExistence’,The Journal of Philosophy, 120:173–219.
  • Sutton, C. S., 2012, ‘Colocated Objects, Tally-Ho: ASolution to the Grounding Problem’,Mind, 121:703–730.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Against the MaximalityPrinciple’,Metaphysica, 15: 381–390.
  • Tahko, Tuomas E., 2009, ‘Against the VaguenessArgument’,Philosophia, 37: 335–340.
  • Tallant, Jonathan, 2014, ‘Against MereologicalNihilism’,Synthese, 191: 1511–1527.
  • te Vrugt, Michael, 2021, ‘The Mereology ofThermodynamic Equilibrium’,Synthese,199: 12891–12921.
  • Teitel, Trevor, 2022, ‘How to Be a SpacetimeSubstantivalist’,The Journal of Philosophy,119: 233–278.
  • Thomasson, Amie, 2003, ‘Realism and Human Kinds’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 57:580–609.
  • –––, 2006, ‘Metaphysical Arguments AgainstOrdinary Objects’,Philosophical Quarterly, 56:340–359.
  • –––, 2007,Ordinary Objects, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2009, ‘Answerable and UnanswerableQuestions’, in David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman(eds.),Metametaphysics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp.444–471.
  • –––, 2013, ‘The OntologicalSignificance of Constitution’,The Monist, 96:54–72.
  • –––, 2015,Ontology Made Easy, Oxford:Oxford University Press.
  • –––, 2019, ‘Replies to Comments onOntology Made Easy’,Philosophy andPhenomenological Research, 99: 251–264.
  • Thomson, Judith Jarvis, 1983, ‘Parthood and Identity AcrossTime’,The Journal of Philosophy, 80: 201–220.Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1998, ‘The Statue and theClay’,Noûs, 32: 149–173.
  • Thunder, Simon D., 2017, ‘Mereological Nihilism:Keeping it Simple’,Thought: A Journal of Philosophy,6: 278–287.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Composite Objects as MereManys’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 13:20–50.
  • –––, 2024a, ‘Mereological Nihilismand Material Constitution’,Pacific PhilosophicalQuarterly, 105: 448–467.
  • –––, 2024b, ‘Two PhysicalisticArguments for Microphysical Manyism’,Erkenntnis:1–22.
  • Tichý, Pavel, 1987/2004, ‘Individuals and TheirRoles’, in Vladimir Svoboda, Bjørn Jesperson, and ColinCheyne (eds.),Pavel Tichý’s Collected Papers inLogic and Philosophy, Otago: Otago University Press, pp.711–748.
  • Tillman, Chris and Joshua Spencer, 2020, ‘AdvancedD&D’,Analysis, 80: 533–544.
  • Toner, Patrick, 2006, ‘Meta-Ontology and AccidentalUnity’,Philosophical Quarterly, 56:550–561.
  • –––, 2008a, ‘Emergent Substance’,Philosophical Studies, 141: 281–297.
  • –––, 2008b, ‘On Merricks’sDictum’,Journal of Philosophical Research, 33:293–297.
  • Torza, Alessandro, 2017, ‘Vague Existence’,OxfordStudies in Metaphysics, 10: 201–234.
  • Turner, Jason, 2011, ‘Ontological Nihilism’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 6: 3–54.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Existence and Many-OneIdentity’,Philosophical Quarterly, 63:313–329.
  • Tye, Michael, 1990, ‘Vague Objects’,Mind,99: 535–557.
  • –––, 1992, ‘Review ofMaterialBeings’,Philosophical Review, 101:881–884.
  • –––, 1996a, ‘Fuzzy Realism and the Problemof the Many’,Philosophical Studies, 81:215–225.
  • –––, 1996b, ‘Is Consciousness Vague orArbitrary?’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,56: 679–685.
  • –––, 2021,Vagueness and the Evolutionof Consciousness: Through the Looking Glass, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press.
  • Unger, Peter, 1979a, ‘I Do Not Exist’, in G. F.Macdonald (ed.),Perception and Identity, New York:Macmillan, pp. 235–251. Reprinted in Rea 1997a.
  • –––, 1979b, ‘There Are No OrdinaryThings’,Synthese, 41: 117–154.
  • –––, 1979c, ‘Why There Are NoPeople’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 4:177–222.
  • –––, 1980, ‘The Problem of theMany’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 5:411–467.
  • –––, 2004, ‘The Mental Problems of theMany’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 1:195–222.
  • –––, 2005,All the Power in the World,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Uzquiano, Gabriel, 2004, ‘Plurals and Simples’,Noûs, 87: 429–451.
  • Van Cleve, James, 1986, ‘Mereological Essentialism,Mereological Conjunctivism, and Identity Through Time’,Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 11: 141–156.
  • –––, 2008, ‘The Moon and Sixpence: ADefense of Mereological Universalism’, in Theodore Sider, JohnHawthorne, and Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.),Contemporary Debates inMetaphysics, Malden: Blackwell, pp. 321–340.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Substance andShadow’,The Review of Metaphysics, 76:611–650.
  • van Elswyk, Peter, 2018, ‘Contrast and Constitution’,Philosophical Quarterly, 68: 158–174.
  • van Inwagen, Peter, 1981, ‘The Doctrine of ArbitraryUndetached Parts’,Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 62:123–137. Reprinted in Rea 1997a.
  • –––, 1987, ‘When Are ObjectsParts?’,Philosophical Perspectives, 1: 21–47.Reprinted in Kim et al. 2011.
  • –––, 1990,Material Beings, Ithaca:Cornell.
  • –––, 1993, ‘Reply to Reviewers’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 53:709–719.
  • –––, 1994, ‘Composition asIdentity’,Philosophical Perspectives, 8:207–220.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Introduction: Inside andOutside the Ontology Room’, in hisExistence: Essays inOntology, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp.1–14.
  • –––, 2019, ‘Against Analytic ExistenceEntailments’, in Javier Cumpa and Bill Brewer (eds.),TheNature of Ordinary Objects, Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, pp. 173–197.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Paraphrase Techniques forNihilists’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 13:3–19.
  • Vander Laan, David, 2010, ‘A Relevance Constraint onComposition’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 88:135–145.
  • Varzi, Achille C., 2002, ‘Words and Objects’, inAndrea Bottani, Massimiliano Carrara, and Daniele Giaretta (eds.),Individuals, Essence, and Identity: Themes of AnalyticMetaphysics, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp.49–75.
  • –––, 2003, ‘Perdurantism, Universalism,and Quantifiers’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy,81: 208–215.
  • –––, 2005, ‘Change, Temporal Parts, andthe Argument From Vagueness’,Dialectica, 59:485–498.
  • –––, 2011, ‘Boundaries, Conventions, andRealism’, in Joseph K. Campbell, Michael O’Rourke,and Matthew H. Slater (eds.),Carving Nature at itsJoints: Natural Kinds in Metaphysics and Science, Cambridge MA:MIT Press, pp. 129–153.
  • Vavova, Katia, 2015, ‘Evolutionary Debunking of MoralRealism’,Philosophy Compass, 10: 104–116.
  • Vogt, Lisa and Werner, Jonas, 2024, ‘CardinalComposition’,Erkenntnis, 89:1457–1479.
  • Waechter, Jonas and Ladyman, James., 2019, ‘In Defence ofOrdinary Objects and a Naturalistic Answer to the Special CompositionQuestion’, in Cumpa, Javier, and BrewerBill (eds.),The Nature of Ordinary Objects,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 82–128.
  • Wake, Andrew V., 2011, ‘Spacetime and Mereology’,Erkenntnis, 74: 17–35.
  • Wallace, Megan B., 2011a, ‘Composition as Identity: Part1’,Philosophy Compass, 6: 804–816.
  • –––, 2011b, ‘Composition as Identity: Part2’,Philosophy Compass, 6: 817–827.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Counterparts and CompositionalNihilism: A Reply to A. J. Cotnoir’,Thought: A Journal ofPhilosophy, 2: 242–247.
  • –––, 2014, ‘The Argument from Vaguenessfor Modal Parts’,Dialectica, 68: 355–373.
  • –––, 2020, ‘Counterexamples andCommonsense’,Analysis, 80: 544–558.
  • Warren, Jared, 2021, ‘Ontology, Set Theory, and theParaphrase Challenge’,Journal of Philosophical Logic,50: 1231–1248.
  • Wasserman, Ryan, 2002, ‘The Standard Objection to theStandard Account’,Philosophical Studies, 111:197–216.
  • Watson, Duncan, 2010, ‘An Argument Against an ArgumentAgainst the Necessity of Universal Mereological Composition’,Analysis, 70: 78–82.
  • Weatherson, Brian, 2003, ‘Many Many Problems’,Philosophical Quarterly, 53: 481–501.
  • Werner, Jonas, 2021, ‘Plenitude and NecessarilyUnmanifested Dispositions’,Thought: A Journal ofPhilosophy, 10: 169–177.
  • Wheeler, Samuel C., 1979, ‘On That Which is Not’,Synthese, 41: 155–173.
  • Wiggins, David, 1968, ‘On Being in the Same Place at theSame Time’,Philosophical Review, 77: 90–95.Reprinted in Rea 1997a.
  • –––, 2001,Sameness and SubstanceRenewed, New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Wilkins, Shane, 2016, ‘Why Paraphrase Nihilism Fails’,Synthese, 193: 2619–2632.
  • Williams, J. Robert G., 2006a, ‘An Argument for theMany’,Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 106:411–417.
  • –––, 2006b, ‘Illusions of Gunk’,Philosophical Perspectives, 20: 493–513.
  • –––, 2007, ‘Eligibility andInscrutability’,Philosophical Review, 116:361–399.
  • –––, 2013, ‘Part-Intrinsicality’,Noûs, 47: 431–452.
  • Williams, Neil E., 2021, ‘(A New Paradigm for) theProblem of the Many’,Synthese, 199:5533–5550.
  • Williamson, Timothy, 1994,Vagueness, London:Routledge.
  • –––, 2007,The Philosophy ofPhilosophy, Malden: Blackwell.
  • –––, 2013,Modal Logic as Metaphysics,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Wilson, Jessica M., 2010, ‘What is Hume’s Dictum, andWhy Believe It?’,Philosophy and PhenomenologicalResearch, 80: 595–637.
  • –––, 2013, ‘A Determinable-Based Accountof Metaphysical Indeterminacy’,Inquiry, 56:359–385.
  • –––, 2021,Metaphysical Emergence,Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Witmer, D. Gene, 2003, ‘Review ofWorld WithoutDesign’,Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 81:603–606.
  • Woods, Evan T., 2021, ‘Many, But One’,Synthese, 198: 4609–4626.
  • Woodward, Richard, 2011, ‘Metaphysical Indeterminacy andVague Existence’,Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, 6:183–197.
  • Wu, Xinhe, 2023, ‘Boolean Mereology’,Journalof Philosophical Logic, 52: 731–766.
  • Yablo, Stephen, 1987, ‘Identity, Essence, andIndiscernibility’,The Journal of Philosophy, 84:293–314.
  • –––, 2014, ‘Carnap’s Paradox andEasy Ontology’,Journal of Philosophy, 111:470–501.
  • Yang, Eric T., 2013, ‘Eliminativism, Interventionism and theOverdetermination Argument’,Philosophical Studies,164: 321–340.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Ordinary Parts and TheirComplements’,Erkenntnis, 88:389–396.
  • Yang, Eric T. and Stephen T. Davies, 2017, ‘Composition andthe Will of God’, in Eric J. Silverman and T. Ryan Byerly(eds.),Paradise Understood, Oxford: Oxford University Press,pp. 213–227.
  • Yi, Byeong-Uk, 1999, ‘Is Mereology OntologicallyInnocent?’,Philosophical Studies, 93:141–160.
  • –––, 2021, ‘Is CompositionIdentity?’,Synthese, 198: 4467–4501.
  • Zerbudis, Ezequiel, 2018, ‘El Conservadurismo RealistaAcerca de la Composición de Daniel Korman’,Cuadernosde Filosofía, 36: 33–53.
  • –––, 2020a, ‘A Defense of theConceptualist Solution to the ‘Grounding Problem’ forCoincident Objects’,Revista de Humanidades deValparaíso, 16: 41–60.
  • –––, 2020b, ‘Concepts, Intentions, andMaterial Objects’,Manuscripto, 43: 73–114.
  • –––, 2023, ‘Sutton’s Solution to theGrounding Problem’,Manuscripto, 46: 1–28.
  • Zilioli, Ugo, 2024,Eliminativism in Ancient Philosophy:Greek and Buddhist Philosophers on Material Objects,London; New York; Dublin: Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Zimmerman, Dean W., 1995, ‘Theories of Masses and Problemsof Constitution’,Philosophical Review, 104:53–110.
  • –––, 1996, ‘Could Extended Objects Be MadeOut of Simple Parts? An Argument for ‘AtomlessGunk’’,Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,56: 1–29.
  • –––, 1999, ‘Review ofSubstance: ItsNature and Existence’,Philosophical Review, 108:118–122.

Other Internet Resources

[Please contact the author with suggestions.]

Copyright © 2025 by
Daniel Z. Korman<dkorman@ucsb.edu>
Jonathan Barker<Jonathan.Barker@ucf.edu>

Open access to the SEP is made possible by a world-wide funding initiative.
The Encyclopedia Now Needs Your Support
Please Read How You Can Help Keep the Encyclopedia Free

Browse

About

Support SEP

Mirror Sites

View this site from another server:

USA (Main Site)Philosophy, Stanford University

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy iscopyright © 2025 byThe Metaphysics Research Lab, Department of Philosophy, Stanford University

Library of Congress Catalog Data: ISSN 1095-5054


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp