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In metaphysics and ontology, nonexistent objects are a concept advanced by Austrian philosopher Alexius Meinong in the 19th and 20th centuries within a "theory of objects". He was interested in intentional states which are directed at nonexistent objects. Starting with the "principle of intentionality", mental phenomena are intentionally directed towards an object. People may imagine, desire or fear something that does not exist. Other philosophers concluded that intentionality is not a real relation and therefore does not require the existence of an object, while Meinong concluded there is an object for every mental state whatsoever—if not an existent then at least a nonexistent one.
Round square copula
The round square copula is a common example of the dual copula strategy used in reference to the "problem of nonexistent objects" as well as their relation to problems in modern philosophy of language.
The issue arose, most notably, between the theories of contemporary philosophers Alexius Meinong (see Meinong's 1904 book Investigations in Theory of Objects and Psychology) and Bertrand Russell (see Russell's 1905 article "On Denoting"). Russell's critique of Meinong's theory of objects, also known as the Russellian view, became the established view on the problem of nonexistent objects.
In late modern philosophy, the concept of the "square circle" (German: viereckiger Kreis) had also been discussed before in Gottlob Frege's The Foundations of Arithmetic (1884).
The dual copula strategy
The strategy employed is the dual copula strategy, also known as the dual predication approach, which is used to make a distinction between relations of properties and individuals. It entails creating a sentence that is not supposed to make sense by forcing the term "is" into ambiguous meaning.
The dual copula strategy was originally brought to prominence in contemporary philosophy by Ernst Mally. Other proponents of this approach include: Héctor-Neri Castañeda, William J. Rapaport, and Edward N. Zalta.
By borrowing Zalta's notational method (Fb stands for b exemplifies the property of being F; bF stands for b encodes the property of being F), and using a revised version of Meinongian object theory which makes use of a dual copula distinction (MOTdc), we can say that the object called "the round square" encodes the property of being round, the property of being square, all properties implied by these, and no others. But it is true that there are also infinitely many properties being exemplified by an object called the round square (and, really, any object)—e.g. the property of not being a computer, and the property of not being a pyramid. Note that this strategy has forced "is" to abandon its predicative use, and now functions abstractly.
When one now analyzes the round square copula using the MOTdc, one will find that it now avoids the three common paradoxes: (1) The violation of the law of noncontradiction, (2) The paradox of claiming the property of existence without actually existing, and (3) producing counterintuitive consequences. Firstly, the MOTdc shows that the round square does not exemplify the property of being round, but the property of being round and square. Thus, there is no subsequent contradiction. Secondly, it avoids the conflict of existence/non-existence by claiming non-physical existence: by the MOTdc, it can only be said that the round square simply does not exemplify the property of occupying a region in space. Finally, the MOTdc avoids counterintuitive consequences (like a 'thing' having the property of nonexistence) by stressing that the round square copula can be said merely to encode the property of being round and square, not actually exemplifying it. Thus, logically, it does not belong to any set or class.
In the end, what the MOTdc really does is create a kind of object: a nonexistent object that is very different from the objects we might normally think of. Occasionally, references to this notion, while obscure, may be called "Meinongian objects."
The dual property strategy
Making use of the notion of "non-physically existent" objects is controversial in philosophy, and created the buzz for many articles and books on the subject during the first half of the 20th century. There are other strategies for avoiding the problems of Meinong's theories, but they suffer from serious problems as well.
First is the dual property strategy, also known as the nuclear–extranuclear strategy.
Mally introduced the dual property strategy, but did not endorse it. The dual property strategy was eventually adopted by Meinong. Other proponents of this approach include: Terence Parsons and Richard Routley.
According to Meinong, it is possible to distinguish the natural (nuclear) properties of an object, from its external (extranuclear) properties. Parsons identifies four types of extranuclear properties: ontological, modal, intentional, technical—however, philosophers dispute Parson's claims in number and kind. Additionally, Meinong states that nuclear properties are either constitutive or consecutive, meaning properties that are either explicitly contained or implied/included in a description of the object. Essentially the strategy denies the possibility for objects to have only one property, and instead they may have only one nuclear property. Meinong himself, however, found this solution to be inadequate in several ways and its inclusion only served to muddle the definition of an object.
The other worlds strategy
There is also the other worlds strategy. Similar to the ideas explained with possible worlds theory, this strategy employs the view that logical principles and the law of contradiction have limits, but without assuming that everything is true. Enumerated and championed by Graham Priest, who was heavily influenced by Routley, this strategy forms the notion of "noneism". In short, assuming there exist infinite possible and impossible worlds, objects are freed from necessarily existing in all worlds, but instead may exist in impossible worlds (where the law of contradiction does not apply, for example) and not in the actual world. Unfortunately, accepting this strategy entails accepting the host of problems that come with it, such as the ontological status of impossible worlds.
Meinong's jungle
Meinong's jungle is a term used to describe the repository of non-existent objects in the ontology of Alexius Meinong. An example of such an object is a "round square", which cannot exist definitionally and yet can be the subject of logical inferences, such as that it is both "round" and "square".
Meinong, an Austrian philosopher active at the turn of the 20th century, believed that since non-existent things could apparently be referred to, they must have some sort of being, which he termed sosein ("being so"). A unicorn and a pegasus are both non-being; yet it is true that unicorns have horns and pegasi have wings. Thus non-existent things like unicorns, square circles, and golden mountains can have different properties, and must have a 'being such-and-such' even though they lack 'being' proper. The strangeness of such entities led to this ontological realm being referred to as "Meinong's jungle". The jungle is described in Meinong's work Über Annahmen (1902). The name is credited to William C. Kneale, whose Probability and Induction (1949) includes the passage "after wandering in Meinong's jungle of subsistence ... philosophers are now agreed that propositions cannot be regarded as ultimate entities".
The Meinongian theory of objects (Gegenstandstheorie) was influential in the debate over sense and reference between Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell which led to the establishment of analytic philosophy and contemporary philosophy of language. Russell's theory of descriptions, in the words of P. M. S. Hacker, enables him to "thin out the luxuriant Meinongian jungle of entities (such as the round square), which, it had appeared, must in some sense subsist in order to be talked about". According to the theory of descriptions, speakers are not committed to asserting the existence of referents for the names they use.
Meinong's jungle is cited as an objection to Meinong's semantics, as the latter commits one to ontically undesirable objects; it is desirable to be able to speak meaningfully about unicorns, the objection goes, but not to have to believe in them. Nominalists (who believe that general or abstract terms and predicates exist but that either universals or abstract objects do not) find Meinong's jungle particularly unpalatable. As Colin McGinn puts it, "[g]oing naively by the linguistic appearances leads not only to logical impasse but also to metaphysical extravagance—as with Meinong's jungle, infested with shadowy Being." An uneasiness with the ontological commitments of Meinong's theory is commonly expressed in the bon mot "we should cut back Meinong's jungle with Occam's razor".
Meinong's jungle was defended by modal realists, whose possible world semantics offered a more palatable variation of Meinong's Gegenstandstheorie, as Jaakko Hintikka explains:
If you ask "Where are the non-existent objects?" the answer is, "Each in its own possible world." The only trouble with that notorious thicket, Meinong's jungle, is that it has not been zoned, plotted and divided into manageable lots, better known as possible worlds.
— Hintikka, Jaakko, The Logic of Epistemology and the Epistemology of Logic, p. 40.
However, modal realists retain the problem of explaining reference to impossible objects such as square circles. For Meinong, such objects simply have a 'being so' that precludes their having ordinary 'being'. But this entails that 'being so' in Meinong's sense is not equivalent to existing in a possible world.
See also
- Abstract object theory
- Empty name, a name without a referent
- Extended modal realism
- Fictionalism, a theory which holds that one can talk about fictional objects without being committed to their existence
- Meontology
- Modal realism
- Noneism, the philosophical belief that there are things that do not exist
- Nonexistence
- Object of the mind
- Plato's beard
- Platonic realism
- Theory of descriptions
- Wooden iron
References
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Nonexistent Objects: Historical Roots".
- Reicher, Maria (2014). "Nonexistent Objects". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Alexius Meinong, "Über Gegenstandstheorie" ("The Theory of Objects"), in Alexius Meinong, ed. (1904). Untersuchungen zur Gegenstandstheorie und Psychologie (Investigations in Theory of Objects and Psychology), Leipzig: Barth, pp. 1–51.
- Bertrand Russell, "On Denoting," Mind, New Series, Vol. 14, No. 56. (Oct. 1905), pp. 479–493. online text, doi:10.1093/mind/XIV.4.479, JSTOR text.
- Zalta 1983, p. 5.
- Gottlob Frege, The Foundations of Arithmetic, Northwestern University Press, 1980[1884], p. 87.
- Jacek Paśniczek, The Logic of Intentional Objects: A Meinongian Version of Classical Logic, Springer, 1997, p. 125.
- Mally, Ernst, Gegenstandstheoretische Grundlagen der Logik und Logistik, Leipzig: Barth, 1912, §33.
- Ernst Mally – The Metaphysics Research Lab
- Dale Jacquette, Meinongian Logic: The Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence, Walter de Gruyter, 1996, p. 17.
- Mally, Ernst. 1909. "Gegenstandstheorie und Mathematik", Bericht Über den III. Internationalen Kongress für Philosophie zu Heidelberg (Report of the Third International Congress of Philosophy, Heidelberg), 1–5 September 1908; ed. Professor Dr. Theodor Elsenhans, 881–886. Heidelberg: Carl Winter’s Universitätsbuchhandlung. Verlag-Nummer 850. Translation: Ernst Mally, "Object Theory and Mathematics", in: Jacquette, D., Alexius Meinong, The Shepherd of Non-Being (Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer, 2015), pp. 396–404, esp. 397.
- Dale Jacquette, Meinongian Logic: The Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence, Walter de Gruyter, 1996, p. 16.
- Jacquette, Dale (1996). "On Defoliating Meinong's Jungle". Axiomathes. 7 (1–2): 17–42. doi:10.1007/BF02357196. S2CID 121956019.
- Kneale, William C. (1949). Probability and Induction. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 12. OCLC 907671.
- Hacker, P. M. S. (1986). Insight and Illusion. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-19-824783-4.
- Klima, Gyula (2001). "Existence and Reference in Medieval Logic". In Lambert, Karel (ed.). New Essays in Free Logic. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 211. ISBN 1-4020-0216-5.
- McGinn, Colin (1993). The Problem of Consciousness. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 105. ISBN 0-631-18803-7.
- Smith, A. D. (2002). The Problem of Perception. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 240. ISBN 0-674-00841-3.
Gilbert Ryle once referred to Meinong as 'the supreme entity-multiplier in the history of philosophy', and Keith Donnellan alludes to 'the Meinongian population explosion', both thereby expressing a common view that lies behind the bon mot that we should cut back Meinong's jungle with Occam's razor.
- See also Plato's beard in W. V. O. Quine, "On What There Is", The Review of Metaphysics 2 (5), 1948.
- Hintikka, Jaakko (1989). The Logic of Epistemology and the Epistemology of Logic. Kluwer Academic. p. 40. ISBN 0-7923-0040-8.
Sources
- Routley, Richard (1980). Exploring Meinong's Jungle and Beyond. Departmental Monograph #3, Department of Philosophy, RSSS, Australian National University.
- Priest, Graham (2016). Towards Non-Being: The Logic and Metaphysics of Intentionality. Second edition. Oxford: Clarendon. ISBN 978-0198783602.
- Crittenden, Charles (1991). Unreality: The Metaphysics of Fictional Objects. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-2520-4.
- Jacquette, Dale (1997). Meinongian Logic: the Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-014865-X.
- Zalta, Edward N. (1983). Abstract Objects: An Introduction to Axiomatic Metaphysics. Synthese Library. Vol. 160. Dordrecht, Netherlands: D. Reidel Publishing Company. ISBN 978-90-277-1474-9.
External links
- Reicher, Maria (2006-09-07). "Nonexistent Objects". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
In metaphysics and ontology nonexistent objects are a concept advanced by Austrian philosopher Alexius Meinong in the 19th and 20th centuries within a theory of objects He was interested in intentional states which are directed at nonexistent objects Starting with the principle of intentionality mental phenomena are intentionally directed towards an object People may imagine desire or fear something that does not exist Other philosophers concluded that intentionality is not a real relation and therefore does not require the existence of an object while Meinong concluded there is an object for every mental state whatsoever if not an existent then at least a nonexistent one Round square copulaThe round square copula is a common example of the dual copula strategy used in reference to the problem of nonexistent objects as well as their relation to problems in modern philosophy of language The issue arose most notably between the theories of contemporary philosophers Alexius Meinong see Meinong s 1904 book Investigations in Theory of Objects and Psychology and Bertrand Russell see Russell s 1905 article On Denoting Russell s critique of Meinong s theory of objects also known as the Russellian view became the established view on the problem of nonexistent objects In late modern philosophy the concept of the square circle German viereckiger Kreis had also been discussed before in Gottlob Frege s The Foundations of Arithmetic 1884 The dual copula strategy The strategy employed is the dual copula strategy also known as the dual predication approach which is used to make a distinction between relations of properties and individuals It entails creating a sentence that is not supposed to make sense by forcing the term is into ambiguous meaning The dual copula strategy was originally brought to prominence in contemporary philosophy by Ernst Mally Other proponents of this approach include Hector Neri Castaneda William J Rapaport and Edward N Zalta By borrowing Zalta s notational method Fb stands for b exemplifies the property of being F bF stands for b encodes the property of being F and using a revised version of Meinongian object theory which makes use of a dual copula distinction MOTdc we can say that the object called the round square encodes the property of being round the property of being square all properties implied by these and no others But it is true that there are also infinitely many properties being exemplified by an object called the round square and really any object e g the property of not being a computer and the property of not being a pyramid Note that this strategy has forced is to abandon its predicative use and now functions abstractly When one now analyzes the round square copula using the MOTdc one will find that it now avoids the three common paradoxes 1 The violation of the law of noncontradiction 2 The paradox of claiming the property of existence without actually existing and 3 producing counterintuitive consequences Firstly the MOTdc shows that the round square does not exemplify the property of being round but the property of being round and square Thus there is no subsequent contradiction Secondly it avoids the conflict of existence non existence by claiming non physical existence by the MOTdc it can only be said that the round square simply does not exemplify the property of occupying a region in space Finally the MOTdc avoids counterintuitive consequences like a thing having the property of nonexistence by stressing that the round square copula can be said merely to encode the property of being round and square not actually exemplifying it Thus logically it does not belong to any set or class In the end what the MOTdc really does is create a kind of object a nonexistent object that is very different from the objects we might normally think of Occasionally references to this notion while obscure may be called Meinongian objects The dual property strategy Making use of the notion of non physically existent objects is controversial in philosophy and created the buzz for many articles and books on the subject during the first half of the 20th century There are other strategies for avoiding the problems of Meinong s theories but they suffer from serious problems as well First is the dual property strategy also known as the nuclear extranuclear strategy Mally introduced the dual property strategy but did not endorse it The dual property strategy was eventually adopted by Meinong Other proponents of this approach include Terence Parsons and Richard Routley According to Meinong it is possible to distinguish the natural nuclear properties of an object from its external extranuclear properties Parsons identifies four types of extranuclear properties ontological modal intentional technical however philosophers dispute Parson s claims in number and kind Additionally Meinong states that nuclear properties are either constitutive or consecutive meaning properties that are either explicitly contained or implied included in a description of the object Essentially the strategy denies the possibility for objects to have only one property and instead they may have only one nuclear property Meinong himself however found this solution to be inadequate in several ways and its inclusion only served to muddle the definition of an object The other worlds strategy There is also the other worlds strategy Similar to the ideas explained with possible worlds theory this strategy employs the view that logical principles and the law of contradiction have limits but without assuming that everything is true Enumerated and championed by Graham Priest who was heavily influenced by Routley this strategy forms the notion of noneism In short assuming there exist infinite possible and impossible worlds objects are freed from necessarily existing in all worlds but instead may exist in impossible worlds where the law of contradiction does not apply for example and not in the actual world Unfortunately accepting this strategy entails accepting the host of problems that come with it such as the ontological status of impossible worlds Meinong s jungleMeinong s jungle is a term used to describe the repository of non existent objects in the ontology of Alexius Meinong An example of such an object is a round square which cannot exist definitionally and yet can be the subject of logical inferences such as that it is both round and square Meinong an Austrian philosopher active at the turn of the 20th century believed that since non existent things could apparently be referred to they must have some sort of being which he termed sosein being so A unicorn and a pegasus are both non being yet it is true that unicorns have horns and pegasi have wings Thus non existent things like unicorns square circles and golden mountains can have different properties and must have a being such and such even though they lack being proper The strangeness of such entities led to this ontological realm being referred to as Meinong s jungle The jungle is described in Meinong s work Uber Annahmen 1902 The name is credited to William C Kneale whose Probability and Induction 1949 includes the passage after wandering in Meinong s jungle of subsistence philosophers are now agreed that propositions cannot be regarded as ultimate entities The Meinongian theory of objects Gegenstandstheorie was influential in the debate over sense and reference between Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell which led to the establishment of analytic philosophy and contemporary philosophy of language Russell s theory of descriptions in the words of P M S Hacker enables him to thin out the luxuriant Meinongian jungle of entities such as the round square which it had appeared must in some sense subsist in order to be talked about According to the theory of descriptions speakers are not committed to asserting the existence of referents for the names they use Meinong s jungle is cited as an objection to Meinong s semantics as the latter commits one to ontically undesirable objects it is desirable to be able to speak meaningfully about unicorns the objection goes but not to have to believe in them Nominalists who believe that general or abstract terms and predicates exist but that either universals or abstract objects do not find Meinong s jungle particularly unpalatable As Colin McGinn puts it g oing naively by the linguistic appearances leads not only to logical impasse but also to metaphysical extravagance as with Meinong s jungle infested with shadowy Being An uneasiness with the ontological commitments of Meinong s theory is commonly expressed in the bon mot we should cut back Meinong s jungle with Occam s razor Meinong s jungle was defended by modal realists whose possible world semantics offered a more palatable variation of Meinong s Gegenstandstheorie as Jaakko Hintikka explains If you ask Where are the non existent objects the answer is Each in its own possible world The only trouble with that notorious thicket Meinong s jungle is that it has not been zoned plotted and divided into manageable lots better known as possible worlds Hintikka Jaakko The Logic of Epistemology and the Epistemology of Logic p 40 However modal realists retain the problem of explaining reference to impossible objects such as square circles For Meinong such objects simply have a being so that precludes their having ordinary being But this entails that being so in Meinong s sense is not equivalent to existing in a possible world See alsoPhilosophy portalAbstract object theory Empty name a name without a referent Extended modal realism Fictionalism a theory which holds that one can talk about fictional objects without being committed to their existence Meontology Modal realism Noneism the philosophical belief that there are things that do not exist Nonexistence Object of the mind Plato s beard Platonic realism Theory of descriptions Wooden ironReferencesStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nonexistent Objects Historical Roots Reicher Maria 2014 Nonexistent Objects In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Alexius Meinong Uber Gegenstandstheorie The Theory of Objects in Alexius Meinong ed 1904 Untersuchungen zur Gegenstandstheorie und Psychologie Investigations in Theory of Objects and Psychology Leipzig Barth pp 1 51 Bertrand Russell On Denoting Mind New Series Vol 14 No 56 Oct 1905 pp 479 493 online text doi 10 1093 mind XIV 4 479 JSTOR text Zalta 1983 p 5 Gottlob Frege The Foundations of Arithmetic Northwestern University Press 1980 1884 p 87 Jacek Pasniczek The Logic of Intentional Objects A Meinongian Version of Classical Logic Springer 1997 p 125 Mally Ernst Gegenstandstheoretische Grundlagen der Logik und Logistik Leipzig Barth 1912 33 Ernst Mally The Metaphysics Research Lab Dale Jacquette Meinongian Logic The Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence Walter de Gruyter 1996 p 17 Mally Ernst 1909 Gegenstandstheorie und Mathematik Bericht Uber den III Internationalen Kongress fur Philosophie zu Heidelberg Report of the Third International Congress of Philosophy Heidelberg 1 5 September 1908 ed Professor Dr Theodor Elsenhans 881 886 Heidelberg Carl Winter s Universitatsbuchhandlung Verlag Nummer 850 Translation Ernst Mally Object Theory and Mathematics in Jacquette D Alexius Meinong The Shepherd of Non Being Berlin Heidelberg Springer 2015 pp 396 404 esp 397 Dale Jacquette Meinongian Logic The Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence Walter de Gruyter 1996 p 16 Jacquette Dale 1996 On Defoliating Meinong s Jungle Axiomathes 7 1 2 17 42 doi 10 1007 BF02357196 S2CID 121956019 Kneale William C 1949 Probability and Induction Oxford Clarendon Press p 12 OCLC 907671 Hacker P M S 1986 Insight and Illusion Oxford Clarendon Press p 8 ISBN 0 19 824783 4 Klima Gyula 2001 Existence and Reference in Medieval Logic In Lambert Karel ed New Essays in Free Logic Boston Kluwer Academic Publishers p 211 ISBN 1 4020 0216 5 McGinn Colin 1993 The Problem of Consciousness Oxford Blackwell p 105 ISBN 0 631 18803 7 Smith A D 2002 The Problem of Perception Cambridge Harvard University Press p 240 ISBN 0 674 00841 3 Gilbert Ryle once referred to Meinong as the supreme entity multiplier in the history of philosophy and Keith Donnellan alludes to the Meinongian population explosion both thereby expressing a common view that lies behind the bon mot that we should cut back Meinong s jungle with Occam s razor See also Plato s beard in W V O Quine On What There Is The Review of Metaphysics 2 5 1948 Hintikka Jaakko 1989 The Logic of Epistemology and the Epistemology of Logic Kluwer Academic p 40 ISBN 0 7923 0040 8 SourcesRoutley Richard 1980 Exploring Meinong s Jungle and Beyond Departmental Monograph 3 Department of Philosophy RSSS Australian National University Priest Graham 2016 Towards Non Being The Logic and Metaphysics of Intentionality Second edition Oxford Clarendon ISBN 978 0198783602 Crittenden Charles 1991 Unreality The Metaphysics of Fictional Objects Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 2520 4 Jacquette Dale 1997 Meinongian Logic the Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence Berlin Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 014865 X Zalta Edward N 1983 Abstract Objects An Introduction to Axiomatic Metaphysics Synthese Library Vol 160 Dordrecht Netherlands D Reidel Publishing Company ISBN 978 90 277 1474 9 External linksReicher Maria 2006 09 07 Nonexistent Objects In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy