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Betterave
Guest
No, actually I wasn’t thinking of the trope nominalist.as far as i am aware, nominalists do deny the reality of natures/essences (in the sense that they are not real). What you are thinking of is the Trope nominalist who denies universals, however support the idea of the trope (a property held within a thing and only that thing. Example being two pieces of paper both having completely different instances of white, even if the measurements for wavelength are exactly the same in every way).
Nominalists do not deny that there really are red things, that there really are human beings, that there really are cats, etc. None of them do, so far as I know. If you want to claim otherwise, please refer to something specific.
There are also set nominalists who apply the mathematical concepts of sets to metaphysics. ie: A is B if an only if A is a member of the set B
Out of curiosity: Where does Quine reject universals? Where does he reject sets??Then, finally, there is the Quine-ian nominalist or Austere nominalist who rejects universals, tropes as well as sets. Austere nominalism is what i wish to focus on.