Introduction
1: The Problem of Universals: A Problem about Truthmakers
2: The Explananda of the Problems of Universals
3: The Many over One
4: Resemblance Nominalism
5: The Coextension Difficulty
6: Russell's Regress
7: The Resemblance Structure of Property Classes
8: Goodman's Difficulties
9: The Imperfect Community Difficulty
10: The Companionship Difficulty
11: The Mere Intersections Difficulty
12: The Superiority of Resemblance Nominalism
Appendix: On Imperfect Communities and the Non-communities they
Entail
References, Index
Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra is Fellow and Tutor of Philosophy at Hertford College, Oxford.
Rodriguez-Pereyra ... develops a novel understanding of the problem of universals, offers his own conception of truthmaking and examines the relative virtues of qualitative and quantitative economy... [he] deserves praise for following arguments where they lead and challenging so many of the ingrained assumptions that metaphysicians routinely bring to bear upon the discussion of resemblance nominalism. Fraser MacBride, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Dan Dennett's Philosophical Lexicon contains the entry: 'Exhume, v. to revive a position generally thought to be humed.' This book is the most brilliant philosophical exhumation that it has been my pleasure to encounter. This book argues that our attributions of properties and relations can be given satisfactory truthmakers using no more than resemblances holding between ordinary particulars. Many of us had assumed that this program is bankrupt, but now we must think again ... With patient and ingenious argument [Rodriguez-Pereyra] has shown that the theory has more to be said for it than ever I, and I suspect many others, had imagined. The fundamental nature of properties and relations may be the central question in metaphysics. He has made an important contribution to the topic. D. M. Armstrong, Australasian Journal of Philosophy
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