Abilities, Faculties, Powers, and Dispositions

In The metaphysics of mind. New York: Oxford University Press (1989)
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Abstract

This chapter argues that discussing abilities, and indeed dispositions and attributes of all kinds, the philosopher must be constantly on his guard against the temptation to hypostatize them, that is to say, to treat them as if they were substances or parts or ingredients of substances. A power or capacity must not be thought of as a thing in its own right, for instance as a flimsy actuality or an incorporeal vehicle. The difference between a power and its exercise or vehicle is a category difference, not a difference like that between solid and shadow.

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Anthony Kenny
Oxford University

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