Any Sum of Parts which are Water is Water

Humana Mente 4 (19):41-55 (2011)
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Abstract

Mereological entities often seem to violate ‘ordinary’ ideas of what a concrete object can be like, behaving more like sets than like Aristotelian substances. However, the mereological notions of ‘part’, ‘composition’, and ‘sum’ or ‘fusion’ appear to find concrete realisation in the actual semantics of mass nouns. Quine notes that ‘any sum of parts which are water is water’; and the wine from a single barrel can be distributed around the globe without affecting its identity. Is there here, as some have claimed, a ‘natural’ or ‘innocent’ form of mereology? The claim rests on the assumption that what a mass noun such as ‘wine’ denotes — the wine from a single barrel, for example — is indeed a unit of a special type, the sum or fusion of its many ‘parts’. The assumption is, however, open to question on semantic grounds.

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Henry Laycock
Queen's University

Citations of this work

Mereology.Achille C. Varzi - 2016 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Mereology.A. J. Cotnoir & Achille C. Varzi - 2021 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Sortals.Richard E. Grandy - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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References found in this work

Principles of mathematics.Bertrand Russell - 1931 - New York,: W.W. Norton & Company.
Word and Object.Willard Van Orman Quine - 1960 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 17 (2):278-279.
Introduction to mathematical philosophy.Bertrand Russell - 1919 - New York: Dover Publications.
Parts of Classes.David K. Lewis - 1991 - Mind 100 (3):394-397.

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