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Substance and Attribute

An ordinary object such as an apple has many attributes yet seems to be a single thing that bears them. This topic asks what an individual substance is and how it relates to the properties predicated of it.

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Definition

A substance is an individual thing that exists in its own right and bears attributes; an attribute is a property predicated of a substance.

Scope

Covers the Aristotelian conception of primary substance, the substratum or bare-particular theory, bundle theory, and disputes over whether a thing is anything beyond its properties.

Core questions

  • What is it to be an individual substance?
  • Is there a substratum underlying an object's properties?
  • Is an object just a bundle of its properties?
  • What unifies the many attributes of one thing?

Key concepts

  • Substance
  • Attribute
  • Substratum
  • Bare particular
  • Bundle
  • Individuation
  • Essence

Key theories

Substratum (bare particular) theory
Each thing has, besides its properties, a propertyless substratum that bears those properties and individuates the thing, a view associated with one reading of Locke's 'something we know not what'.
Bundle theory
An object is nothing but a bundle of co-present properties; there is no propertyless substratum underlying them.
Aristotelian substance
Primary substances are individual things such as this man or this horse; in the Metaphysics Aristotle analyzes substance in terms of form, matter, and essence.

History

Aristotle's account of primary substance set the agenda; medieval and early modern philosophers, including Locke and Leibniz, debated the substratum and the unity of substance. Twentieth-century empiricists revived bundle theory, and contemporary analytic metaphysics continues to weigh substratum against bundle accounts.

Debates

Substratum versus bundle
Substratum theorists posit a bare particular to bear and individuate properties; bundle theorists deny any such substratum and identify the object with its compresent properties, facing the question of what unifies and individuates the bundle.

Key figures

  • Aristotle
  • John Locke
  • Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
  • Bertrand Russell
  • Michael Loux

Related topics

Seminal works

  • aristotleMetaphysics
  • locke1690

Frequently asked questions

Is an object anything more than its properties?
Substratum theorists say yes, there is a bearer underlying the properties; bundle theorists say no, the object just is a bundle of compresent properties. The dispute turns on individuation and the unity of an object.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts