Matrix, Matter, and Method in Metaphysics
Henry Veatch, Indiana University
(The Presidential Address, delivered at the twelfth meetingof the Metaphysical Society of America, Clark University, March 17, 1961; originally published in The Review of Metaphysics, 14 (1961): 581600.)
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References
[1] Human Freedom and the Social Order: An Essay in Christian Philosophy (Durham, N.C., 1959), pp. 6170.
[2] Phénoméologie de la Perception, Foreword, trans. Alice Koller mimeographed, n.d.), pp. 2, 3, 4.
[3] The Mystery of Being (Henry Regnery Co.: Chicago, 1950), vol. I, p. 41.
[4] Recent Changes in the Foundations of Exact Science, in Philosophic Problems of Nuclear Science (London, 1952), pp. 11 ff.
[5] Op. cit., p. 3.
[6] This statement we shall wish to qualify somewhat in the sequel.
[7] And there must be simple substances, since there are compounds; for a compound is nothing but a collection or aggregregatum of simple things. The Monadology, p. 2.
[8] sc., in the case of the so-called properties.
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