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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260605T065756Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Vienna:20250129T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Vienna:20250129T200000
SUMMARY:Aquinas Lecture 2025: “The Ontology of Individual Particulars“
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TZID:Europe/Vienna
LOCATION:Karl-Rahner-Platz 3\, Innsbruck\, Austria
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Aquinas Lecture 2025: Anna Marmodoro: <br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>&ldquo\;The Ontology of Individual Particulars</strong>&ldquo\;</p>\n<p><em><strong>Abstract</strong></em><br>Peter Strawson claimed that each object of our everyday experience is one <em>qua</em> <em>individual particular</em>. However\, why would something be one (= single)\, if it is individual and also particular? I argue that individuality and particularity introduce two different ways of being one\; individuality is <em>descriptive</em>\, while particularity is <em>indexical</em>. And yet\, each object is one! How can this be? I argue that Aristotle\, too\, had thought that an object is an individual particular (<em>tode ti &ndash\; hekaston/ti</em>)\, but he argued that\, additionally\, the oneness of an individual particular requires <em>metaphysical justification</em>. Aristotle&rsquo\;s solution is that an &lsquo\;individual particular&rsquo\; is one because what&rsquo\;s particular <em>qualifies</em> what&rsquo\;s individual in the object (particularising it). I further suggest the alternative possibility of developing the converse of Aristotle&rsquo\;s solution for oneness\, namely\, that an &lsquo\;individual particular&rsquo\; is one because what&rsquo\;s individual<em> qualifies </em>what&rsquo\;s particular in the object (individualising it). I do so by leaning on the (anti-Aristotelian\, anti-descriptivist) &lsquo\;indexical metaphysics&rsquo\; of Michael Ayers.</p>\n<p><em><strong>Anna Marmodoro</strong></em> is the Leonard and Elizabeth Eslick Professor of Philosophy at Saint Louis University (US) and Honorary Professor of Philosophy at Durham University (UK)\, where she <br>held the Chair of Metaphysics between 2016 and 2024. She specializes primarily in ancient philosophy and contemporary metaphysics. Her latest books are <em>Properties in Ancient Metaphysics </em>(CUP\, 2023) and <em>Forms and Structure in Plato&rsquo\;s Metaphysics</em>&nbsp\;(OUP 2021). She is currently working on a new monograph titled: <em>Parmenidean Essentialism. <br></em>She is also the co-editor of<em>&nbsp\;Dialogoi. Ancient Philosophy Today</em>\, published by <br>Edinburgh University Press.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Christoph Jäger";CN=Federica Isabella Malfatti;CN=Katherine Dormandy:
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