Please explain to a beginner: what is metaphysics? 7 Metaphysics is the title of a collection of lectures by Aristotle The name is not by Aristotle but due to a later librarian who edited all scriptures of Aristotle The librarian arranged the scripts in question behind Aristotle's scripts on physics which in Greek means meta ta physica
What is the difference between metaphysics and ontology? Metaphysics is a very broad field, and metaphysicians attempt to answer questions about how the world is Ontology is a related sub-field, partially within metaphysics, that answers questions of what things exist in the world An ontology posits which entities exist in the world
metaphysics - Distinction between essence,substance, being . . . Existence: I've never really seen this defined, and contemporary analytic metaphysics tends to make no distinction between existing and being The Meinongians famously distinguished between different kinds of being, where some things with being might not exist
What are some real-life applications of metaphysics? Metaphysics seems to be a field that is almost purely abstract However, I am also interested in knowing how metaphysics has impacted the real world, if at all
metaphysics - What is the difference between the spiritual and the . . . Metaphysics can be understood as dealing with what is common in the (empirical) sciences in a generalizing manner Whereas biology deals with objects like cells, physics with atoms, chemistry with elements and mathematics with sets or numbers, metaphysics asks what it means to be an object at all and discusses our limits in understanding
metaphysics - What does Pirsig mean by Quality? - Philosophy Stack . . . Pirsig's Metaphysics of Quality gets to some recurrent questions that philosophy has encountered in a variety conundrums In the following discussion I use signs to stand for any empirically observable language such as spoken, written or signed languages
metaphysics - Why are metaphysicians obsessed with language . . . Metaphysics (at the very least) lies in the province of the 'human' world — values, attitudes, ideals, social and cultural norms, etc — and the 'human' world is constructed in, mediated by, and infused with language