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Nominalism
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===Medieval philosophy=== In [[medieval philosophy]], the French philosopher and [[Theology|theologian]] [[Roscellinus]] (c.β1050 β c.β1125) was an early, prominent proponent of nominalism. Nominalist ideas can be found in the work of [[Peter Abelard]] and reached their flowering in [[William of Ockham]], who was the most influential and thorough nominalist. Abelard's and Ockham's version of nominalism is sometimes called [[conceptualism]], which presents itself as a middle way between nominalism and realism, asserting that there ''is'' something in common among like individuals, but that it is a concept in the mind, rather than a real entity existing independently of the mind. Ockham argued that only individuals existed and that universals were only mental ways of referring to sets of individuals. "I maintain", he wrote, "that a universal is not something real that exists in a subject ... but that it has a being only as a thought-object in the mind [objectivum in anima]". As a general rule, Ockham argued against assuming any entities that were not necessary for explanations. Accordingly, he wrote, there is no reason to believe that there is an entity called "humanity" that resides inside, say, Socrates, and nothing further is explained by making this claim. This is in accord with the analytical method that has since come to be called [[Ockham's razor]], the principle that the explanation of any phenomenon should make as few assumptions as possible. Critics argue that conceptualist approaches answer only the psychological question of universals. If the same concept is ''correctly'' and non-arbitrarily applied to two individuals, there must be some resemblance or shared property between the two individuals that justifies their falling under the same concept and that is just the metaphysical problem that universals were brought in to address, the starting-point of the whole problem (MacLeod & Rubenstein, 2006, Β§3d). If resemblances between individuals are asserted, conceptualism becomes moderate realism; if they are denied, it collapses into nominalism.
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