exemplification$26559$ - definizione. Che cos'è exemplification$26559$
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

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  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è exemplification$26559$ - definizione

CONCEPT IN METAPHYSICS AND LOGIC
Principle of instantiation; Principle of exemplification

Exemplification         
MODE OF SYMBOLIZATION BASED ON EXAMPLES
Exemplify
·noun That which exemplifies; a case in point; example.
II. Exemplification ·noun The act of exemplifying; a showing or illustrating by example.
III. Exemplification ·noun A copy or transcript attested to be correct by the seal of an officer having custody of the original.
Exemplified copy         
  • Exemplified certified copy of Decree Absolute issued by The Family Court Deputy District Judge - divorce certificate
  • Exemplification of Common Recovery by William Brown of Ravenden, Bedfordshire, issued by Court of Common Pleas, Westminster, 1803
SIGNED COPY OF AN ORIGINAL DOCUMENT
3-way certificate
An exemplified copy (or exemplification) is an official attested copy or transcript of a public instrument, made under the seal and original pen-in-hand signature of a court or public functionary and in the name of the sovereign, for example, "The People of the State of Oklahoma". Exemplifications can only be attested and executed by either the authority holding the record or the issuing authority.
Exemplify         
MODE OF SYMBOLIZATION BASED ON EXAMPLES
Exemplify
·vt To show or illustrate by example.
II. Exemplify ·vt To prove or show by an attested copy.
III. Exemplify ·vt To Copy; to Transcribe; to make an attested copy or transcript of, under seal, as of a record.

Wikipedia

Instantiation principle

The instantiation principle or principle of instantiation or principle of exemplification is the concept in metaphysics and logic (first put forward by David Malet Armstrong) that there can be no uninstantiated or unexemplified properties (or universals). In other words, it is impossible for a property to exist which is not had by some object.

Consider a chair. Presumably chairs did not exist 150,000 years ago. Thus, according to the principle of instantiation, the property of being a chair did not exist 150,000 years ago either. Similarly, if all red objects were to suddenly go out of existence, then the property of being red would likewise go out of existence.

To make the principle more plausible in the light of these examples, the existence of properties or universals is not tied to their actual existence now, but to their existence in space-time considered as a whole. Thus, any property which is, has been, or will be instantiated exists. The property of being red would exist even if all red things were to be destroyed, because it has been instantiated. This broadens the range of properties which exist if the principle is true.

Those who endorse the principle of instantiation are known as in re (in thing or in reality) realists or 'immanent realists'.

Difficulties for the instantiation principle arise from the existence of truths about the uninstantiated, for example about higher infinities, or about an uninstantiated shade of blue (if such a shade exists). Those truths appear to be about something, but what can their truthmaker be if they do not in some sense exist?