Russell (1961: 629):
Things as we know them are bundles of sensible qualities: a table, for example, consists of its visual shape, its hardness, the noise it emits when rapped, and its smell (if any). These different qualities have certain [contiguities] in experience, which lead common sense to regard them as belonging to one 'thing', but the concept of 'thing' or 'substance' adds nothing to the perceived qualities, and is unnecessary.
Blogger Comments:
Through the lens of Systemic Functional Linguistic Theory, things and qualities are two types of participant (Halliday & Matthiessen 1999: 182), with the latter typically construed as an Attribute (op. cit.: 208) in an intensive (elaborating) attributive relation; that is: a quality is construed as a class to which things are members.
Here, however, the relation is construed as:
- identifying, not attributive, such that the identity decodes things by reference to aggregates of qualities:
things [[as we know them]]
|
are
|
bundles [of sensible qualities]
|
Identified/Token
|
Process: relational: intensive
|
Identifier/Value
|
- identifying and extending, instead of attributive and elaborating:
a table
|
consists of
|
its visual shape, its hardness, the noise [[[it emits || when rapped]]] and its smell (if any)
|
Identified/Token
|
Process: relational: possession: containment
|
Identifier/Value
|
- attributive, but extending instead of elaborating:
these different qualities
|
belong to
|
one 'thing'
|
Carrier: possessed
|
Process: relational: possession
|
Attribute: possessor
|
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