Abstract
Abstract: It is often claimed that realists about universals must be either “platonists,”
holding that universals lack spatio-temporal location, or “aristotelians,”
asserting that universals are located where their instances are. What’s
more, both camps agree that locatedness or unlocatedness is part of the essential
nature of universals; consequently, aristotelians say that universals cannot
exist un located, and platonists allege that universals cannot be located. Here
I argue that the dispute may be resolved by synthesizing the most attractive
features of each position. I claim that universals are located at their instances
when instantiated by particulars which themselves possess a spatio-temporal
location; however, un instantiated universals exist without location. This has the
consequence that it will often be a contingent matter whether a given universal
has a location, if the universal is only contingently instantiated. Nevertheless,
I claim, objections to this position may be overcome.