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The idea of substance has been widely and differently used throughout the history of phil-osophy from the time of Greeks onward—by Plato, Aris-totle, Locke, Descartes, Spinoza, Kant, and

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deriving from particular predications, as ‘This is a key’.

Since we do not then have a predicative use of ‘a key’ in

‘There is a key’, nothing which can be attached to the

for-mer phrase can be described as a predicate of a predicate

It can also be queried whether ‘Something is a key’

fea-tures a second-order predicate, but now because ‘is a key’

may be said to function in just the same way as in ‘This is a

key’, despite the absence of any namelike term More

gen-erally, there is good reason for broadening the category of

subject to include a greater range of noun phrases than is

customary, even those that are negative, as ‘nothing’ or

‘no one’ So we might include here ‘Every dog has its day’,

‘Gentlemen prefer blondes’, and ‘Nothing surprises him

any more’ In ‘Every dog has its day’ the phrase ‘every dog’

is a genuine unit, relevantly on a par with ‘Fido’, though of

course not a name It is relevantly on a par in so far as we

can say: ‘has its day’ is true of every dog Similarly, ‘prefer

blondes’ is true of gentlemen and ‘surprises him any more’

is true of nothing The contrast here continues to be with

‘Here is an F ’, where we cannot say: ‘is an F’ is true of here.

b.b.r

P T Geach, ‘Subject and Predicate’, Mind (1950).

B Rundle, Grammar in Philosophy (Oxford, 1979).

P F Strawson, Subject and Predicate in Logic and Grammar

(Lon-don, 1974)

subjective truth This self-consciously paradoxical

description was employed by the Danish philosopher

Søren Kierkegaard to describe the force of passionate

con-viction and commitment, particularly with reference to

religion The intended contrast, obviously, is objective

truth, scientific truth, matters which can be verified or

established by proof But ‘subjective truth’, although

con-scientiously ‘unscientific’, is not therefore meaningless or

irrational, as some later positivists would argue (and as

Kierkegaard sometimes suggests himself ) Subjective

truth is a commitment to believe, in the face of ‘objective

uncertainty’, in matters which cannot be demonstrated or

verified, such as the existence of God The defence of such

convictions, in so far as there can be such, are strictly

per-sonal, a matter of personal passion (not mere

‘prefer-ence’), and refer to an outlook on life, a way of ‘existing’,

rather than a set of cognitive or ontological commitments

r.c.sol

*double truth

S Kierkegaard, Concluding Unscientific Postscript (1846; Princeton,

NJ, 1944)

subjectivism:see objectivism and subjectivism.

subjectivity.Pertaining to the subject and his or her

par-ticular perspective, feelings, beliefs, and desires The term

pervades modern philosophy, usually contrasted with

‘objectivity’, but it plays various and sometimes

ambigu-ous roles in epistemology, in contemporary Continental

philosophy, and in cognitive science In casual

philosoph-ical and other conversation, the term often refers to

unargued or unjustified personal feelings and opinions as

opposed to knowledge and justified belief In epistemol-ogy, especially since Descartes, the term is often used to refer to the realm of experience, however circumscribed and defined, and is typically defined with reference to the first-person standpoint The project of much of modern epistemology, accordingly, has been the attempt to argue from this admittedly limited standpoint to objective knowledge, whether by ingenious deduction (Descartes), causal inference (Locke), transcendental argument (Kant), dialectical development (Hegel), or phenomeno-logical analysis (Husserl) In recent Continental philoso-phy, the subject of subjectivity has been under severe scrutiny, and the very idea has been rejected by more rad-ical recent opinion Revolting against Jean-Paul Sartre, who followed Descartes in insisting that free subjectivity (as *‘consciousness’) was the ontological essence of being human, such thinkers as Michel Foucault and Jacques Der-rida have rejected the notion of ‘the subject’ altogether and insisted that what is mistakenly identified by that name is a ‘construction’ of politics, language, and culture

In cognitive science, subjectivity has been argued, e.g by Thomas Nagel, to be the ultimate obstacle to any reduc-tion of the mental to the physiological Subjectivity, on this account, is phenomenological experience, or ‘what it’s like to be’ a certain conscious being (for example, a man, a woman, or a bat), the tendency to project (and take one’s own attitudes as properties of the world) The notion of subjectivity is also used, particularly in multicul-tural contexts, to underscore the importance of perspec-tive, the fact that everyone sees the world from his or her (or its) individual vantage-point, defined in part by nature,

by culture, and by individual experience Philosophers have often asked, Can we ‘escape’ our subjectivity? But

what would it mean to do so? What would it mean not to

D Dennett, Consciousness Explained (London, 1993).

J Derrida, Speech and Phenomena (Evanston, Ill., 1973).

E Husserl, Cartesian Meditations (The Hague, 1960).

T Nagel, The View from Nowhere (New York, 1986).

J.-P Sartre, Being and Nothingness (New York, 1956); tr from L’Être et le néant (Paris, 1943).

J Searle, The Rediscovery of Mind (Cambridge, 1992).

sublime.The concept of sublimity is seen by some aes-thetic theorists as of only historical interest, but by others

as a lastingly important mode of response to basic items of human experience From the later seventeenth century there developed accounts of experience of objects that exceeded our perceptual and imaginative grasp, and defied neoclassical conceptions of form and *beauty Although these objects were daunting and dreadful, they were nevertheless exhilarating to contemplate: Alpine crags and ravines, storms at sea, the sky at night Given this duality, writers differed over the source of our

resilience vis-à-vis such intimidating phenomena For

Kant, for example, despite the failure of imagination’s

syn-thesizing powers (we cannot realize the interstellar

dis-tances), our reason and our status as free moral beings

900 subject and predicate

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allow us to cope with the sheer magnitudes and energies

of phenomenal nature and to be aware of a personal value

that these do not threaten A religious note was, and is,

never very far from many accounts of sublimity: its dual

quality can be analogous to experience of the divine—a

mysterium tremendum et fascinans, as Rudolf Otto famously

*holy, numinous, and sacred

P Crowther, The Kantian Sublime: From Morality to Art (Oxford,

1989)

R W Hepburn, ‘The Concept of the Sublime: Has it Any

Rele-vance for Philosophy Today?’, Dialectics and Humanism (1988).

S Monk, The Sublime (first pub 1935; Ann Arbor, Mich., 1960) is

the classic historical account

substance and attribute The idea of substance has been

widely and differently used throughout the history of

phil-osophy from the time of Greeks onward—by Plato,

Aris-totle, Locke, Descartes, Spinoza, Kant, and many other

philosophers What is perhaps the main distinction

between substance and attribute originally gave support

to the feeling that reality is independent and objective,

robust and solid, that there is something out there which

is abiding and remains the same in spite of varieties and

changes encountered in the world Substance was taken as

the abiding and constant, while attributes and properties

changed However, if changing, the attributes and

proper-ties were objective as a result of their association with and

dependence on the substance Without an underpinning

substance or substratum to which to belong, could they

have reality? Originally, the distinction between

sub-stance and attribute was taken literally, but subsequent

revisionism has often made it almost grammatical or

func-tional (e.g Leibniz, Hume)

There is indeed reason to believe that the

substance–attribute distinction, like the object–property

distinction, is parasitic on some other distinction One

rea-son is that when we see an apple, for instance, we grasp it

at once as a whole object We do not see it, as it were,

com-positionally, first seeing its red shape, then conjoining

with this a taste, a texture, etc., and finally proceeding to

unify these elements into a single apple We do not

per-ceptually grasp an apple through the distinction between

substance and attribute Perception seems not to be the

source of the distinction

With the imposition of the substance–attribute

distinc-tion, objects which initially were perceived as wholes now

come to be analysed or restructured The need to do so

seems to be pressed upon us by various considerations

But the manner of the restructuring appears to be

sug-gested not by reality, so to speak, but by the linguistic

dis-tinction between subject and predicate, this being the very

means available to us for describing objects in their

var-ieties and alterations Whereas the perception of objects is

as wholes, speech, on the other hand, is almost always

construed from parts, and is in this sense compositional

Conceiving the unitary apple in terms of the distinction

between substance and attribute or object and property

seems to be parasitic on, and a suggestion from, the lin-guistic distinction between subject and predicate Three considerations or aims have moved philosophers

to engage in the restructuring of things in terms of sub-stance and attribute The first aim is to secure the ability to speak of similar objects whose features are nevertheless being contrasted (e.g a green banana and a yellow banana) This aim encourages the idea of the object as comprising a thoroughly denuded substance (often called the ultimate subject of properties) on to which the attrib-utes which it shoulders, and with respect to which object and object can be compared, are grafted This view of things was held by John Locke, who made famous the phrase ‘substance or something-I-know-not-what’ It was also formulated by Aristotle in terms of ‘primary sub-stance’ It was accepted by philosophers for centuries While the first aim addresses static and compositional aspects of the existence of objects, the second addresses dynamic aspects of the existence of objects, thereby involving a reference to time, as Kant noted It secures the ability to speak of an object remaining the same yet differ-ent, invoking the idea of *change In this context, sub-stance is proclaimed to be the perdurant in change, the absolutely unchanging core, the ground which enables an object to be the same in spite of the newness of its features The third aim also involves a reference to time, and addresses intra-active and interactive aspects of the exist-ence of objects It imbues an object with the active power

to initiate change in itself (Leibniz) or in another object (Locke and Kant) and the passive power to allow change

to be initiated in it (Locke and Kant) In this sense, sub-stance is seen as the ultimate centre of force used in grounding change-producing actions and causalities

It is customary to think of substance and attribute in terms of ordinary things But it needs to be noted that two sorts of primary substance have been discussed histor-ically: material substances for the extended physical world, and spiritual substances for the non-physical, unextended world (Descartes) Spiritual or mental substances enter into the attempted solution of the mind–body problem in terms of substance *dualism

All of this still leaves disagreement possible over the necessity of a conception of substance There is also the question of the precise nature of its supposed relations with the properties of an object Why do the properties of

an object hang together? How should one think of the relation between an object and its properties so that prop-erties do not simply fall off and scatter, but are instead col-lected in the object? Think of the difference between a fruit with a pit (where the flesh corresponds to the proper-ties of an object and the pit corresponds to the primary substance) and a vegetable like an onion whose layers aggregate without a supporting pit This difference between the two is over a sort of metaphysical arithmetic: would subtracting just its properties from an object leave anything behind, the substance or something-I-know-not-what of John Locke, or would it leave absolutely nothing

substance and attribute 901

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William R Carter, The Elements of Metaphysics (New York, 1990).

D W Hamlyn, Metaphysics (Cambridge, 1984).

Richard Taylor, Metaphysics (Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1963).

substratum:see substance and attribute.

sufficient condition: see necessary and sufficient

condition

sufficient reason, principle of Leibniz held that the

prin-ciple of sufficient reason is fundamental to all reasoning It

states, in his own words, that ‘there can be found no fact

that is true or existent, or any true proposition, without

there being a sufficient reason for its being so and not

otherwise, although we cannot know these reasons in

most cases’ In short, the principle is that nothing is

with-out a reason for its being, and for being as it is: nihil fit sine

ratione.

Schopenhauer devoted his earliest philosophical work

to discussion of the principle, which he characterized as

what ‘authorizes us everywhere to search for the why’ He

rightly criticized his predecessors, Leibniz included, for

misunderstanding it, chiefly by confusing the notions of

reason and cause Schopenhauer himself distinguished four

distinct explanatory applications of the principle: the

phys-ical (in explaining change in the natural world), the logphys-ical

(in deriving truths a priori), the mathematical (in giving

geometrical demonstrations), and the moral (in

explain-ing actions in terms of motives) This classification might

be unsatisfactory, but the principle itself captures

some-thing intuitively compelling, in having it that whatever is

or happens must from some point of view be finally

G W Leibniz, The Monadology (1714), sects 31, 32.

A Schopenhauer, The Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient

Rea-son (1813).

Sufism.A variety of Muslim *mysticism characterized by

the concept of a union of the human being with God

through the power of love The union was thought by

many to be of the will and it was held that suffering, as well

as love, was a necessary condition of the union Its days as

a major force in Islam are long since past a.bro

A J Arberry, Sufism (London, 1950).

suicide.The most conventional definition of ‘suicide’ is

intentionally caused self-destruction However, several

problems for this simple definition arise from sacrificial

death, martyrdom that could have been avoided, actions

that risk near-certain death or mutilation, refusals of

med-ical treatment with foreknowledge of death,

addiction-induced overdosing, coercion to self-caused death, and

the like Some definitions of ‘suicide’ have tried to take

account of these cases by not requiring suicidal intent, but

only foreknowledge of death or the acceptance of a risk of

death These different definitions have led to

disagree-ments over cases—for example, whether Socrates and

Samson committed suicide

Starkly different views about the moral justifiability of suicide have also been defended in the history of philoso-phy Debates traditionally centred on whether suicide vio-lates one or more of three types of obligation: to oneself,

to others, or to God St Thomas Aquinas’s arguments are

typical (Summa Theologiaeii ii, q 64, Art 5):

It is altogether unlawful to kill oneself, for three reasons: [1] everything naturally keeps itself in being Wherefore suicide

is contrary to the natural law and to charity [2] Because every man is part of the community, and by killing himself he injures the community [3] Because life is God’s gift to man, and is subject to His power Hence whoever takes his own life, sins against God

In a famous rebuttal of such traditional views, David Hume identified with a handful of pre-Christian classical writers who considered suicide an honourable and some-times praiseworthy act An autonomous suicide, from Hume’s perspective, is permissible (and on occasion laud-able) if, on balance, more value is produced for the indi-vidual or more value is produced for society than would

be produced by not performing the act of taking one’s life (‘Of Suicide’, posthumous, although suppressed by Hume

in 1757)

Sir William Blackstone (1723–80), codified English law

by using arguments similar to Aquinas’s to explain the state’s right to prevent and punish suicide Blackstone

cat-egorized suicide as ‘self-murder’ and a grave felony (Black-stone’s Commentaries, ch 14) But when laws against

suicide progressively fell, Hume’s theses came to prevail, both in Britain and in North America

Philosophical controversy has recently centred on (1)

*paternalism in suicide intervention and (2) the justifica-tion of assisted suicide Regarding (2), see the entry on

euthanasia Regarding (1), if individuals have a right to

commit suicide, then others appear to have a correlative obligation not to intervene to prevent the suicide Yet we often do intervene, either by reporting a suicide threat or preventing a suicide attempt Many believe that we are justified in intervening in these ways and possibly are

obligated to do so or at least to report suicide threats But if there is a right to commit suicide, are we as justified in

intervening as we commonly think? In the case of almost any similarly intrusive, liberty-limiting action, the person impeded could successfully sue those who intervene

No one doubts that we should intervene to prevent sui-cide by incompetent persons But if we accept an unre-stricted, free-choice principle, the imprudent but competent suicide who would want to live under more favourable circumstances could not legitimately be pre-vented from committing suicide Both law and philoso-phy continue to struggle with issues about the extent to which paternalism is justified in such cases, if it is t.l.b

M P Battin, R Rhodes, and A Silvers (eds.), Physician Assisted Suicide: Expanding the Debate (New York, 1998).

Tom L Beauchamp, ‘Suicide’, in Tom Regan (ed.), Matters of Life and Death, 3rd edn (New York, 1992).

John Donnelly (ed.), Suicide: Right or Wrong? (Buffalo, 1991).

902 substance and attribute

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summum bonum:see good, greatest.

supererogationoccurs when one’s action goes beyond

the demands of duty Supererogatory acts are

praise-worthy to perform but not blamepraise-worthy to omit Saintly

or heroic acts are generally considered to be paradigm

examples However, some philosophers (for example,

strict act-utilitarians) and theologians (for example, those

who emphasize that God demands our best at every

moment) hold that there is no possibility of performing

good or praiseworthy actions which exceed the demands

of duty, and on their view acts of supererogation are not

*ideals, moral

D Heyd, Supererogation (Cambridge, 1982).

superman(or overman) Nietzsche’s image conveying

the idea of human life enhanced and transformed in a

manner sufficient to render it worthy of affirmation, in

contrast to all that is ‘all too human’ about it, dispensing

with all other-worldly hopes and illusions, and

overcom-ing all disillusionment The apotheosis of human vitality

and creativity, this image functions as a guiding idea by

reference to which ‘higher’ and ‘lower’ human types can

be distinguished, and as the locus of meaning (‘the

mean-ing of earth’) in Nietzsche’s naturalistic reassessment of

this life in this world It has élitist rather than racist

over-tones and implications for Nietzsche, emphasizing the

importance of the respects in which human beings

indi-vidually differ in their abilities, and of the manner in which

their differing abilities are cultivated and employed This

reflects his fundamental conviction that what matters

most, and so what is decisive with respect to human worth

and ‘rank’ alike, is ‘the enhancement of life’, which he

con-ceives above all in terms of the flourishing of cultural life

(See e.g Thus Spoke Zarathustra, prologue; The Antichrist,

sect 4; The Will to Power, sect 866.) r.s

*slave morality; great-souled man

Arthur Danto, Nietzsche (New York, 1965), ch 7.

superstructure:see base and superstructure.

supervaluation.A method of valuation that supervenes

on several different lower-order valuations A statement is

super-true (or super-false) if it is true (or false) on all

admis-sible valuations Otherwise it is neither super-true nor

super-false Statements in which the components have no

determinate truth-value can thus themselves be

super-true or super-false ‘This is a really big book, or it’s not’, for

example, is super-true because it is true on all admissible

valuations, even if ‘This is a really big book’ is too vague to

have a single admissible precise valuation d.h.s

James D McCawley, Everything that Linguists have always

Wanted to Know about Logic (but were Ashamed to Ask) (Chicago,

1993)

supervenience.A kind of dependency relation One set of properties is supervenient on a second set when they are

so related that there could not be a difference in the first without there being a difference in the second, though there could be a difference in the second with no differ-ence in the first It has been argued that mental properties are supervenient upon, rather than nomically identical with or related to, physical properties o.r.j

*psychophysical laws

David Charles and Kathleen Lennon (eds.), Reduction, Explanation and Realism (Oxford, 1992).

supposition theory Medieval philosophers developed supposition theory in the late twelfth century to specify the *reference of a term in various propositional contexts

A term has personal supposition when it is used to talk about what it signifies, for example ‘lion’ in ‘She is feeding the lion now’ A term has material supposition when it is used autonymously to talk about its inscription or utter-ance, as in ‘Lion has four letters’ A term has formal sup-position when it stands for a concept or a *universal, as in

‘Lion is a species’ The modes of personal supposition specify how many objects a term is used to talk about: either exactly one (discrete supposition) or at least one (determinate supposition); if the latter, either all instances (distributive supposition) or several (non-distributive con-fused supposition) Supposition theory was used to codify and explain the inferential relations among sentences It was an important part of medieval theories of *truth,

*quantification, *entailment, and *fallacy p.k

*logic, history of

Peter King, Jean Buridan’s Logic: The Treatise on Supposition and the Treatise on Consequences, Synthese Historical Library, xxvii

(Dordrecht, 1985)

survival:see immortality.

Swedish philosophy The history of Swedish philosophy contains few really original or pioneering achievements

To a large extent it has mirrored the general philosophical development of Europe, though in a way that has been marked by national prejudices and national concerns

It was Christianity that first brought Sweden into con-tact with the higher European culture In the later Middle Ages we find Swedish scholars who had studied at Italian

or French universities and were familiar with the best con-temporary culture Perhaps the most important figure was Matthias Ovidi (d 1350) He was the confessor of

St Bridget but also a learned philosopher and theologian

His commentary on the Book of Revelation (Expositio super Apocalypsin) was studied all over Europe.

When Sweden became a great power in the seven-teenth century it became more interesting to the philoso-phers of Europe René Descartes went to Stockholm to give lessons to Queen Christina—and to die Samuel Pufendorf became professor at the newly founded univer-sity of Lund (1668) And Swedes began to take a keener

Swedish philosophy 903

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interest in philosophy The heavy hand of Lutheran

ortho-doxy lay over all intellectual life in Sweden, so out of

necessity philosophical questions also became theological

ones The adherents of Aristotle fought a bitter battle with

the adherents of Peter Ramus The main question was

which philosophy would best serve the purposes of

the-ology When the new philosophy of Descartes reached

the Swedish universities it was at once suspected of

theo-logical heresy Indeed *Cartesianism was officially

con-demned by Charles XI in a decree of 1689 Perhaps the

suspected role of Descartes in converting Queen Christina

to Catholicism had some part in the prejudice against

Cartesianism

The most original philosopher and one of the most

fas-cinating personages of the Swedish seventeenth century

was George Stiernhielm (1598–1672) His unfinished

work Monile Minervae (The Necklace of Minerva)

con-tained the fragments of his philosophy, where hermetic

*mysticism was mingled with Neoplatonic *humanism

His theory of language stressed the non-arbitrary nature

of words According to Stiernhielm etymology is the key

to deep insights into the essence of things

At the end of Sweden’s period as a great power there

appeared another mystic and philosopher who was

des-tined to fame Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772) began

his career as a natural scientist, but was later captivated by

theology and religious speculation Swedenborg’s visions

from the world of the spirits were scornfully dismissed by

Kant as Träume eines Geistersehers (‘dreams of a spirit-seer’).

But to the philosophers of the Romanticism Swedenborg

was an inspired genius He was not typical of Swedish

eighteenth-century philosophy, however The

philoso-phy taught at the universities was sterner and drier The

arid rationalism of Christian Wolff for a long time held

academic philosophy in its thrall Later the empiricism of

Locke and Hume found some adherents

The era of Romantic idealism was pioneered by the

Uppsala philosopher Benjamin Höijer (1767–1812)

Höijer was influenced by Kant and Fichte, but developed

their ideas in an original way His Afhandling om den

philosophiska construktionen (Dissertation on Philosophical

Construction, 1799), anticipated some of Schelling’s

the-ories It was also favourably reviewed by the German

philosopher At the same time its emphasis on the liberty

of the thought and the activity of the spirit was regarded

with suspicion by the authorities Höijer’s academic

career was for a long time held in suspense His

import-ance to the Swedish philosophy of the next century was

nevertheless immense The transcendental idealism that

Höijer had introduced held the stage for more than a

hundred years

The dominant Swedish philosopher of the nineteenth

century was Christoffer Jacob Boström (1797–1866), who

was professor at the university of Uppsala Boström has

been described variously as ‘the Plato of the North’ and as

‘the Swedish Hegel’ His sternly rational *idealism made

no concessions to empirical reality—material things

didn’t exist According to Boström true reality was

identical with God and his ideas Boström worked out his metaphysical system in great detail It proved to have important implications for every sphere of human life, not least the political one, where Boström’s conclusions were strictly conservative Boström had many clever disciples In fact ‘Boströmianism’ dominated Swedish academic philosophy until the turn of the century During the first part of the twentieth century Swedish philosophy was torn between rival schools Particularly important was the feud fought between the Uppsala phi-losophy of Axel Hägerström (1868–1939) and the Lund philosophy of Hans Larsson (1862–1944) Hägerström was famous for his *emotive theory of ethics He denied the possibility of practical knowledge and the existence of objective values According to him values were just pro-jections of emotional attitudes Ethical propositions were said to be neither true nor false, being in fact just noises indicative of certain emotional states

Larsson, on the other hand, upheld the *objectivity of values But his most important contribution to

philoso-phy lay in the field of aesthetics His book Poesiens logik

(The Logic of Poetry, 1899), was intended to show that logical reasoning and poetic intuition are compatible and indeed complementary

After 1945 the strong German influence on Swedish philosophy was broken and was replaced by an Anglo-Saxon one Swedish philosophers began to call themselves

‘analytical philosophers’ Among the most influential philosophers of the first post-war generation were Ingemar Hedenius and Anders Wedberg

Ingemar Hedenius (1908–82) became the best-known

philosopher of his generation through his book Tro och vetande (Belief and Knowledge, 1949) The book contained

a savage attack on Christian dogma and on contemporary Swedish theology Hedenius formulated a ‘maxim for intellectual morality’ (to some extent inspired by Russell), saying that you should only believe what there are rational grounds for believing As Christian belief is muddled, contradictory, and incompatible with modern science, it has to be rejected Some theologians argued that religious faith is atheoretical and does not aspire to say something that is true or false Hedenius rejected this view and tried

to show that Christianity is indeed making statements about reality and is thus open to philosophical or scientific refutation

Anders Wedberg (1913–78) is best known for his work

on the history of philosophy His Plato’s Philosophy of Mathematics (1955) is still useful But his most ambitious work in the field was his Filosofins historia, i–iii (1958–66, translated into English as A History of Philosophy (1982–4) ).

Wedberg´s aim was to write the history of philosophy in a new way He carefully distinguished the philosophical way of writing history of philosophy (which he chose) from the historical way (which he left to others) The philosophical way of doing history of philosophy was to treat the philosophers of the past as contemporaries, to look out for what might still be interesting in their theories from a philosophical point of view, and to interpret them

904 Swedish philosophy

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in a way that would make their arguments as coherent and

as plausible as possible, as seen by a modern analytical

philosopher This should be done, Wedberg argued, even

at the price of the occasional anachronism

Nowadays Swedish philosophers to a large extent

pub-lish their results in Engpub-lish Logic, decision theory, and

applied ethics are among the areas where Swedish

philosophers have been particularly successful in recent

*Danish philosophy; Norwegian philosophy

R E Olson, and A M Paul, Contemporary Philosophy in

Scandi-navia (Baltimore, 1972).

Swinburne, Richard (1934– ) Nolloth Professor of the

Philosophy of the Christian Religion at Oxford from 1985

to 2002 His chief contribution has been to philosophical

theology Perhaps his most interesting achievement is a

rigorous formulation of a cumulative case for *God’s

existence In The Existence of God (1979), he used Bayesian

reasoning to argue that the probability of theism is raised

by such things as the existence of the universe, its order,

the existence of consciousness, human opportunities to

do good, the pattern of history, evidence of miracles, and

religious experience He also argues that the existence of

*evil does not count against the existence of God His

conclusion is that on our total evidence theism is more

probable than not Swinburne’s more recent

investiga-tions have focused on distinctively Christian doctrines

such as sin and atonement, sanctification, and revelation

He has also contributed to philosophy of science through

work on confirmation and on space and time p.l.q

*religion, problems of the philosophy of

R Swinburne, The Existence of God, 2nd edn (Oxford, 2004).

—— The Christian God (Oxford, 1994).

—— Providence and the Problem of Evil (Oxford, 1998).

syllogism.Originally defined by Aristotle as ‘discourse in

which, certain things being posited, something else

neces-sarily follows’, it came to have the narrower meaning

typi-fied by ‘All men are mortal; Greeks are men; therefore

Greeks are mortal’ Until the revolution in logic in the late

nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, most logicians

regarded four types of ‘categorical’ proposition as lying at

the heart of proper reasoning: ‘All S are P’, ‘No S are P’,

‘Some S are P’, and ‘Some S are not P’ A syllogism is an

inference made up of three propositions of these types

Propositions not obviously of these forms (e.g singulars

like ‘Socrates is a man’) were generally regarded as mere

variants on them, just as apparently non-syllogistic

infer-ences were analysed, and sometimes distorted, to fit the

orthodox structure A syllogism may be defined as a piece

of reasoning analysable into:

1 three categorical propositions such that the third

(the conclusion) is presented as following from the

first two (the premisses), and

2 three terms such that one of them (the middle term) is

common to the premisses, the second is common to

the conclusion and one of the premisses, and the third is common to the conclusion and the other premiss

The first term (the subject) of the conclusion is called the minor term, the premiss containing it the minor premiss; and the second term (the predicate) of the conclusion is called the major term, the premiss containing it the major premiss.

Inferences like ‘All men are mortal; all Greeks are men; all Athenians are Greeks; therefore all Athenians are

mor-tal’ were called polysyllogisms Polysyllogisms contain

more than two premisses but are analysable into a sequence of two or more conventional syllogisms

Syllogisms were classified according to their figure and mood, and various rules were invoked to distinguish

between valid and invalid forms c.w

*logic, traditional

I M Bochenski, Ancient Formal Logic (Amsterdam, 1951), 36–54.

W D Ross (ed.), Aristotle’s Prior and Posterior Analytics (Oxford,

1949)

symbol:see sign and symbol.

symbolic logic: see logic, formal or symbolic.

symbols, logical: see Appendix on logical symbols;

nota-tions, logical

symmetric relation A binary, i.e two-term, *relation is symmetric, or symmetrical, when it holds both ways if at

all, i.e if it holds from x to y, it holds from y to x (in sym-bols, R is symmetric if and only if ∀x∀y(Rxy→Ryx) ); for example, living with ‘Asymmetric’ means: if it holds from

x to y, it does not hold from y to x; for example, being half

of ‘Non-symmetric’ may mean either ‘not symmetric’ or

‘neither symmetric nor asymmetric’ c.a.k

W Hodges, Logic (Harmondsworth, 1977).

sympathy.(a) Emotional affinity between two or more persons similarly affected by a given circumstance or (b)

disorder occasioned in one living entity by the disorder of

another In moral philosophy, (b) is developed by Hume

to provide a quasi-mechanical psychological explanation

of why the well-being or misery of one person is of con-cern to others Adam Smith takes Hume’s ideas further in

his Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), in which sympathy is

the analogous feeling that is experienced by the impartial

observer at the thought of the situation of the other person.

j.c.a.g

Philip Mercer, Sympathy and Ethics (Oxford, 1972).

syncategorematic.Literally, what is predicated together with (sc some other predicate) So traditional logic defined as syncategorematic a word that converts one or more simple predicates into what was thought to be a

complex predicate, as in ‘no man’, ‘white and shiny’ The

word now has no technical utility, but is sometimes

syncategorematic 905

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906 syncategorematic

applied to logical *constants or other *topic-neutral

expressions, such as ‘not’, ‘every’, ‘if ’, ‘is’, ‘was’, ‘must’,

N Kretzmann and E Stump (eds.), The Cambridge Translations of

Medieval Philosophical Texts (Cambridge, 1988), i 163–215.

—— A J P Kenny, and J Pinborg (eds.), The Cambridge History of

Later Medieval Philosophy (Cambridge, 1982), ch 11.

syndicalism.Late nineteenth- and twentieth-century

revo-lutionary movement among industrial workers aiming at

transferring ownership and control of the means of

pro-duction and distribution from the capitalist class to unions

of workers (syndicats) by means of strikes Syndicalism

traditionally marched with *anarchism to produce

anarcho-syndicalism *Sorel misappropriated this term

for his quasi-fascist theory of action through irrational

*violence, but mainstream syndicalism continued as a

radical-left workers’ movement a.bel

*worker control

Rudolf Rocker, Anarcho-Syndicalism (London, 1938).

synonymy.Identity of *meaning Different occurrences

of the same expression (e.g word, phrase, sentence) are all

synonymous unless the expression has more than one

meaning Occurrences of different expressions, in the

same or different languages, may also be synonymous:

e.g ‘bucket’ with ‘pail’, ‘j’ai froid’ with ‘I am cold’, ‘gift’

with some occurrences of ‘present’ Expressions that apply

in some situation to the same thing or things need not be

synonymous: e.g ‘I’ and ‘you’ when the former is said by,

and the latter to, someone, or ‘boiled water’ and ‘pure

water’ when boiling and nothing else purifies

Con-versely, in some situations synonymous expressions are

forced to apply to different things: e.g ‘I’ said by different

speakers The view sometimes held that synonymy of

expressions is the same as necessary identity of application

B Mates, Synonymity, University of California Publications in

Philosophy (Berkeley, Calif., 1950), repr in L Linsky (ed.),

Semantics and the Philosophy of Language (Urbana, Ill., 1952).

syntactics.The study of syntax, i.e of the kinds of

expres-sion in a language, and the rules which govern how they

combine together In developing modern logic, Frege

sug-gested a theory of syntactic categories which is also

applic-able to natural languages In Ajdukiewicz’s notation, the

two basic categories are sentences (S), and singular terms

(N); from any categories A and B we can form the new

cat-egory A/B, containing all those expressions which can be

*pragmatics; semantics

K Ajdukiewicz, ‘On Syntactical Coherence’, Review of Meta-physics (1966–7).

synthetic a priori judgements The classification ‘syn-thetic a priori’ applied to judgements, or to true

judge-ments, owes its origin to Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason

(Introduction, B 1–19) It is a hybrid form constructed from the separate distinctions between analytic–synthetic and a posteriori–a priori truth Kant held that we were able to know some truths a priori rather than a posteriori, independently of sense-experience, such as mathematical truths, and that there was a separate contrast to be drawn between analytic and synthetic truths Analytic truths involved judgements in which the predicate was semantic-ally contained in the subject-term or alternatively those whose denial yielded a contradiction With these separate classifications four hybrid forms can be theoretically con-structed, although Kant believed that one (analytic a posteriori) was impossible and two others (synthetic a posteriori and analytic a priori) were uninteresting stand-ard cases The remaining hybrid, synthetic a priori truth, was an important innovation, but both controversial and variously understood For the Logical Positivists the clas-sification was contradictory, since they treated the two basic classifications as equivalent; for Quineans the classi-fication was flawed since the analytic–synthetic distinc-tion was ambiguous and rested on an unelucidated nodistinc-tion

of ‘semantic containment’ More recently Kripke’s separ-ate classifications of necessary–contingent and a priori–a posteriori truth, and the resulting hybrids necessary a posteriori and contingent a priori truth, have been thought to parallel Kant’s innovation Kripke shares with Kant the idea that one of the basic classifications (analytic– synthetic) is semantic, or logical, while the other (a posteriori–a priori) is epistemic, but their conception of the resulting hybrids is not the same Kant’s case for the existence of synthetic a priori truth rests essentially on the idea that not all a priori truths owe their status to their analytic character If it is allowed that a priori truth is not necessarily analytic, then some room is available for

*analytic and synthetic statements; a priori and a poste-riori

I Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, tr Norman Kemp Smith (London,

1929)

S Kripke, Naming and Necessity (Oxford, 1980).

W V Quine, ‘Two Dogmas of Empiricism’, in From a Logical Point of View (Cambridge, Mass., 1953).

synthetic statements: see analytic and synthetic

state-ments

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tabula rasa A phrase (meaning blank writing-tablet)

from the Latin translation of Aristotle’s De anima (430a) It

does not occur in Locke’s Essay (1690), though it is present

in Pierre Coste’s French translation (1700) The Essay, in

its statement of the empiricist thesis that there is nothing

in the mind that was not previously in the senses, speaks

rather of the mind at birth as ‘white paper’ (ii i 2),

*empiricism

R I Aaron, John Locke, 3rd edn (Oxford, 1971), 32, 35, 114.

tacit knowledge.Thinkers often perform complex

rule-governed tasks even though they have no conscious or

explicit knowledge of the rules involved To explain these

capacities, philosophers and psychologists have supposed

that thinkers have unconscious or tacit knowledge of the

rules for executing the tasks A prominent example is

speakers’ ability to produce and understand indefinitely

many grammatical sentences of their language even

though they cannot state the rules of grammar they

con-form to To credit speakers with tacit knowledge of

gram-mar is to suppose they have information-bearing states of

mind—inaccessible to consciousness—that encode the

rules of their language and enable speakers to produce and

comprehend grammatical speech To say that thinkers are

able to perform tasks described by a theory because they

tacitly know the theory is to say that they encode the

information recorded by the theory but not necessarily in

the form in which the theory represents it b.c.s

M Davies, ‘Tacit Knowledge and Subdoxastic States’, in A

George (ed.), Reflections on Chomsky (Oxford, 1989).

Tagore, Rabindranath (1861–1941) Poet, novelist,

play-wright, literary critic, painter, composer, and

education-ist He won the Nobel Prize for literature, and refused a

knighthood Although he deeply influenced the Indian

nationalist movement, he himself embraced a humanist

inter-nationalism This *humanism also coloured his

metaphysics, in which the universal I of the human

enjoyer bestows beauty and hence truth on an otherwise

valueless universe The Absolute Person who craves for

the love of a human other remains unknown like the

pro-tagonist of King of the Dark Chamber (Tagore’s play which

Wittgenstein retranslated) Apart from love of nature and humanity, the highest religion of man, according to Tagore, is to try to enhance our creativity, which is ‘the surplus in man’ allowing us an occasional glimpse of the deeper truth that ‘each of us is King, in our King’s King-dom’ Thus, we can communicate with God, the cosmic artist, only through our individual artistic freedom a.c

*Indian philosophy

Rabindranath Tagore, The Religion of Man (London, 1988).

Tanabe Hajime (1885–1962) Widely regarded as Japan’s next greatest thinker after Nishida, Tanabe is remarkable for the immense compass of his thought, which ranges from the philosophy of science and mathematics, through the philosophy of history, to major works dealing with ideas from Shin Buddhism and Christianity Having stud-ied with Husserl and Heidegger in the mid-1920s, Tanabe became increasingly influenced by Hegel and Kant; and

during the 1930s he developed a ‘logic of species’ (shu no ronri), which emphasized the role of the nation (as species)

as mediating between humankind (as genus) and the his-torical individual Increasingly concerned with philosophy

of religion, Tanabe wrote towards the end of the Second

World War his major work, Philosophy as Metanoetics, in

which he presented a ‘philosophy without philosophy’

based on the phenomenon of ‘repentance’ (zange) and a

way of thinking purged of the nationalistic elements that

he felt had vitiated the logic of species g.r.p

Taitetsu Unno and James Heisig (ed.), The Religious Philosophy of Tanabe Hajime: The Metanoetic Imperative (Berkeley, Calif.,

1990)

Tantra.Ancient and medieval Sanskrit texts containing somewhat unorthodox guidelines, followed by Hindus, Buddhists, and Jainas, for rituals, meditation, and life-orientation The Tantras are deeply monistic and idealistic

in spite of positing numerous female and male deities as immediate objects of worship Some celebrate the body, esoteric geometric patterns, and sexuality as instrumental

to spiritual transcendence Elaborating a transformation-ist account of *causality, Tantrism identifies the cosmic knowing–wishing–acting power which has become the universe with the energy that lies latent in the human T

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body This feminine power is represented as a coiled snake

at the base of the spinal cord—waiting, as it were, to be

woken up and eventually united with the Supreme Male

Spirit in the cortex The task is to recognize oneself as

iden-tical with this pulsating all-pervasive World-spirit This

recognition-philosophy was developed into a full-fledged

metaphysics and epistemology by the great aesthete of

Kashmir Abhinavagupta (ad 980) a.c

*Indian philosophy; Buddhist philosophy

Arthur Avalon, Shakti and Shakta (New York, 1978).

tao:see Confucianism.

Taoism.Major school of thought in China which has been

influential on various aspects of Chinese culture, such as

art, literature, and religion The two best-known Taoist

texts are the Chuang Tzu˘ and the Lao Tzu˘, both probably

composite and compiled in the fourth and third century

bc Other texts traditionally regarded as Taoist include the

syncretic Huai Nan Tzu˘, composed in the second century

bc, and the Lieh Tzu˘, compiled in the second or third

cen-turyad Taoist thought further developed in the third and

fourth century ad, such development being often referred

to as neo-Taoism Better-known texts of the period

include Wang Pi’s (226–49) commentary on the Lao Tzu˘,

and Kuo Hsiang’s (d 312) commentary on the Chuang Tzu˘,

which either borrowed from or built on a commentary by

Hsiang Hsiu ( fl 250) Development of Taoist ideas in this

period subsequently exerted influence on the Chinese

interpretation of Buddhism as well as on the later

development of Confucian thought

A basic tenet of Taoist thought is that the operation of

the human world should ideally be continuous with that

of the natural order, and that one should restore the

conti-nuity by freeing the self from the restrictive influence of

social norms, moral precepts, and worldly goals The

Taoist ideal is often characterized in terms of wu wei

(non-action, not-doing); the Chuang Tzu˘ presents it as involving

one’s responding spontaneously to situations with no

pre-conceived goals or preconceptions of what is proper,

while the Lao Tzu˘ presents it as involving few desires and

absence of striving after worldly goals The actual way of

life involved is subject to different interpretations For

example, some scholars interpret the Chuang Tzu˘ as

advo-cating a withdrawal from social life, while others interpret

it as advocating a relaxation of concern which is

compati-ble with ordinary social activities Subsequent

develop-ments of Taoist thought likewise took different directions

For example, while some Taoist thinkers of the third

centuryad advocated a life of disregard for established

social conventions and values, others such as Wang Pi and

Kuo Hsiang regarded the Taoist ideal as compatible with

ordinary ways of life, including social and political

partici-pation For Kuo Hsiang, the Taoist ideal is, for certain

indi-viduals, even compatible with their being sages in some

more ordinary sense, such as that advocated by the

Con-fucians—it is in the nature of some (but not all) to become

such sages

Taoist thought also has implications for politics Wu wei

can characterize the ideal form of government, which does not teach or impose on the people standards of behaviour, including those of conventional morality, and which provides conditions making possible their function-ing in a way continuous with the natural order With

regard to the relation between states, the Lao Tzu˘ regards

non-contention as enabling a state to outlast competitors There is also a metaphysical dimension to Taoist thought

For example, the Lao Tzu˘portrays tao (the Way) as a

meta-physical entity which is the source of all things and which

is characterized by wu (non-being, vacuity), an idea

fur-ther developed in Wang Pi’s commentary According to

Wang Pi, tao is the ultimate reality which transcends all distinctions and conceptualizations Its substance is wu and its function wu-wei; that is, it does not create or do

any-thing, but just lets things follow their natural course

Sim-ilarly, the sage has wu as substance and wu-wei as function

in that he has eliminated all attachments of the self and just lets everything follow its natural course, without devising and imposing a way of life on himself or others

k.-l.s

*Chinese philosophy; Confucianism

Chuang Tzu˘: The Inner Chapters, tr A C Graham (London, 1981) Commentary on the Lao Tzu˘ by Wang Pi, tr Ariane Rump and

Wing-tsit Chan (Honolulu, 1979)

Lao Tzu˘ (Tao Te Ching), tr D C Lau (Harmondsworth, 1963).

Tarot.The Tarot pack, in its original form, was invented

in the early fifteenth century, at the Court either of Milan

or of Ferrara It consists of seventy-eight cards, being essentially an ordinary pack of cards (save for having four instead of three court-cards in each suit) to which twenty-two additional picture-cards, not belonging to any of the four suits, have been added; the suit-signs are those then ordinarily used in Italy, and still used in many parts of it, for ordinary playing-cards The only use for these cards recorded before the eighteenth century was to play a par-ticular type of card-game, still played in numerous ver-sions in many parts of Europe: one of the picture-cards, the Fool, or Matto, is a kind of wild card, and the remain-ing ones, which form a sequence and depict standard sub-jects such as Love, the Devil, the Star, and so forth, are permanent trumps In 1781 Antoine Court de Gébelin propounded the theory that the cards had been invented

by ancient Egyptian priests as a symbolic expression of their beliefs; the theory was rapidly exploited by profes-sional fortune-tellers In the mid-nineteenth century the French writer Éliphas Lévi incorporated ‘the Tarot’ into his cloudy brand of occultist doctrine, principally by entwining its images with the Kabbalah, with which they had in origin had nothing to do In the last twelve years of the nineteenth century these ideas were taken up in Britain, and in the early years of the twentieth century

T Depaulis, Tarot: Jeu et magie (Paris, 1984).

M Dummett, The Game of Tarot (London, 1980).

908 Tantra

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Tarski, Alfred (1902–83) Tarski was born in Poland, and

taught mathematics at the University of Warsaw until he

emigrated to the United States in 1939 Appointed

Profes-sor of Mathematics at the University of California at

Berkeley in 1946, he made important contributions to the

subject It is for his work in logic that he is best known to

philosophers, for it established the foundations of modern

logical theory

The seminal ideas appear in an early paper (tr as ‘The

Concept of Truth in Formalized Languages’ (1935), repr

in Logic, Semantics, and Metamathematics), whose goal was

a definition of truth for sentences, in a way that both

ensures satisfaction of the schema of type T (*‘snow is

white’) and avoids the *liar paradox In this paper Tarski

distinguishes between a formalized language L, on the one

hand, whose sentences meet a purely syntactical criterion

of well-formedness, and an interpretationof L, a structure

consisting of domains of individuals and predicates and

relations defined in these domains, on the other The

domains supply the values of variables of appropriate type

in the language, and the predicates and relations of ℑare

correlated with predicate and relation symbols of L A

gen-eral characterization of *truth infor sentences of L can

then be specified in terms of the inductively defined

rela-tion of *satisfacrela-tion Tarski showed also that this definirela-tion

could not be carried out in L itself, but required the

resources of a richer metalanguage (Tarski’s theorem)

If each of a set Q of sentences of L is true in ℑ,ℑis said to

be a model of Q In his 1936 paper ‘On the Concept of

Log-ical Consequence’ (reprinted in Logic, Semantics, and

Meta-mathematics), Tarski founded what quickly became the

accepted theory of logical consequence on the model

con-cept: a sentence s is a consequence of a set P of premisses

just in case, when both are formalized, every model of P is

a model of {s} Such has been the comprehensiveness of

the Tarskian revolution in logic that only recently have

dissenting voices been raised (for example, Etchemendy,

*semantic theory of truth

J Etchemendy, The Concept of Logical Consequence (Cambridge,

Mass., 1990)

A Tarski, Logic, Semantics, and Metamathematics, 2nd edn

(Indianapolis, 1983)

tar-water.Made by stirring together tar and cold water,

and drawing off the impregnated water after the solid

residues have settled Advocated by Berkeley in his

strange work Siris: A Chain of Philosophical Reflexions and

Inquiries (1744) for its ‘extraordinary virtues’ as an

all-purpose medicine His enthusiasm, though excessive, was

widely shared in the later eighteenth century and, as a

mild antiseptic, tar-water was probably not entirely

A A Luce, The Life of George Berkeley (London, 1949), 196–206.

taste.The appreciative *sensibility of observers who

experi-ence delight when disinterestedly contemplating certain

natural and artefactual objects ranging from meteoroid

showers over Death Valley to performances of Der Rosenkavalier This concept evolved from Dominique

Bouhours’s use of ‘la délicatesse’ in 1687 to mark the import-ance of emotion in aesthetic appreciation and the ultimacy

of individual response over classical canons of correctness

In England, taste was first modelled as a quasi-perceptual inner sense of beauty not involving judgement (Hutche-son) Hume expected standards to be established by isol-ating features which pleased most serene, experienced observers Kant argued that taste judgements were subject-ive and unsubject-iversally valid In the twentieth century taste was redefined by some as a discriminatory sensitivity to aes-thetic qualities of artworks by insightful percipients The correct perception is triggered by knowledge of history, biography, intention (Croce), or boosted by use of simile and metaphor like ‘His canvasses are fires, they crackle, burn, and blaze’ (Frank Sibley) b.t

Harold Osborne, Aesthetics and Art Theory (New York, 1970).

tautology. A *well-formed formula φ of the *propos-itional calculus is a tautology if the formula is true what-ever truth-values are assigned to its basic (atomic) propositional components This can be determined by

*truth-tables (*Decision procedure.) Tautologies in the predicate calculus can be determined by treating quanti-fied formulae as if they were basic components of well-formed formulae and testing for tautologousness For example,

( (x)Fx~(x)Fx)

is a tautology, corresponding as it does to (P~P),

whereas

( (x)Fx(x)~Fx)

is not a tautology

In an earlier use, the entire set of logically valid propos-itions or analytic truths were sometimes designated as tautologies

On still another use, the theorems of the propositional calculus

φ ≡(φ ∨φ)

φ ≡(φ · φ) are sometimes described as principles of tautology.r.b.m

B Mates, Elementary Logic (Oxford, 1972).

E L Post, ‘Introduction to a General Theory of Propositions’,

American Journal of Mathematics (1921).

Taylor, Charles (1931– ) Canadian philosopher and polit-ical theorist (primarily at Oxford and McGill) whose

writ-ing includes a critique of behaviourism in psychology (The Explanation of Behaviour (1964)), work in and about

polit-ical science, and support for the general view that the methodology of natural science and that of *social science (the latter centring on interpretation) differ fundamen-tally He has defended positive freedom, contributed to theory of responsibility, and written on Hegel Though not reducible to one theme, Taylor’s work often criticizes

Taylor, Charles 909

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