Existence | Definition, Theories, Being, & Facts (original) (raw)

existence, in metaphysics, that which applies neutrally to all and only those things that are real.

Metaphysicians have had a great deal to say about the existence or nonexistence of various things or categories of things, such as God, the soul, a mind-independent or external world, abstract or ideal forms and other universals, possible but not actual objects or worlds, individual essences, and free will. They have had less to say, however, about existence itself—that is, about the content of the concept of existence or about the meaning of the word existence. They have said enough, however, to make possible a taxonomy of theories of existence. Such a taxonomy can be presented as a list of pairs of opposed or contradictory theses about the nature of existence.

A theory of existence may be identified with some combination of the theses discussed above. It should be noted, however, that some combinations are inconsistent, or at least apparently so. For example, anyone who accepts Frege’s account of existence seems to be committed to the theses that existence is a trivial concept, that there is no distinction to be made between being and existence, that existence means the same thing in all its applications, and that existence is not something that one thing can exhibit more perfectly or in some higher degree than another. See also ontology.

Peter van Inwagen