P
polytropos
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No. You’re reading the accounting as an efficient/agent cause, but it is a formal cause.In what sense will they be accounted for with the proposed essences? Will they be accounted for in the same way that me kicking a ball accounts for its motion?
It depends. Particular essences, such as that of the electron and those delivered by research in biology, is certainly falsifiable. That man is rational (a hylemorphist would claim) is something that can be established by demonstrative philosophical argument. There is not a single empirical test for essence as such, but different methods of inquiry appropriate to different objects will be suited to gain knowledge of their natures.Is the account a proposed explanation such as a falsifiable hypothesis?
I take it as an empirical premise (one of the more certain deliverances of physics) that electrons have determinate natures and that their properties are unified (ie. an electron’s being a particular mass and having a negative charge are not accidentally related). I have also argued that convention and reduction do not sufficiently (even in principle) account for the unity of electrons (or other similarly unified substances), so there is an ontological principle of their unity (by that I only mean that we have an ontological commitment to the reality of their structure as something that fixes their nature). But if there there is a determinate principle of unity in electrons, then there is natural candidate for an essence.I read over your quote a few times and I didn’t see anything to substantiate the claim that it is possible to determine essence by any means. You gave a reason for why you think it would be good to have essences, but not an actual demonstration for the possibility of determining their existence.
Regarding the next part of your post: What is an “ontological unity”? All that came up on Google was a single Catholic site that was talking about something unrelated.
There is a combination of methods. It depends on the object of inquiry (as in any field of study). General principles can be determined deductively, but their application is often inductive.I’ve always been curious: What is the primary means of investigation in ontology? Deductive reasoning? Inductive reasoning? Do the metaphysical results inform our understanding of physics, or does it typically work the other way around? I ask because you seem to have arrived at many conclusions with varying degrees of certainty, and I’m wondering if this is because you use a mixture of approaches.