The Dark Side of Being: On What There is Not
open access | peer reviewed-
a cura di
- Filippo Casati - Lehigh University - email
- Filippo Costantini - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email
In contrast to Quine’s (meta-)ontology and his preference for desert landscapes, recent years have seen a renewed interest in ‘non-being’: non-existent entities, mere possibilia, negative properties, negative facts, absences, nothingness, voids, holes, etc. Interest in the category of non-being is not limited to ontology but has also found applications in the philosophy of mind, particularly regarding the role intentionality plays in relation to non-entities and the problem of perceiving absences. Additionally, it has influenced the philosophy of art, especially in discussions about absence art – i.e., art that features absences as aesthetic objects. This issue of JoLMA highlights the richness of the topic by presenting eight fresh papers that range from metaphysics, ontology, and epistemology, to philosophy of language, aesthetics, and philosophy of mind.
Keywords Absence Causation • Lack • Empty quotation • Pictorial abscences • Metaphysical Grounding • Ostensive definition • Perception of absences • Absence • absolute nothingness • negative nothingness • nonidentity • Millares • Fictional objects • Characterization Principle • Eliminativist error theories • Radical perceptualism • Nuclear properties • Being • Nothingness • mixed-media • Metacognitivism • Cognitivism • absence • Kant’s table of nothing • Be missing • Empty string • Non-Being • Adorno • Informalism • Non-existent objects • Semantics • Reported speech • Nāgārjuna • Verbs of absence • (Modal) noneism • Mixed quotation • Aristotle’s homonymy • Moderate perceptualism
Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/Jolma/2723-9640/2024/02 | Pubblicato 11 Dicembre 2024 | Lingua en
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