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Why Realists Need Tropes [PDF]

open access: yesMetaphysica, 2016
We argue that if one wishes to be a realist, one should adopt a Neo-Aristotelian ontology involving tropes instead of a Russellian ontology of property universals and objects.
Markku Keinänen, Jani Hakkarainen
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THE TROPING HYPOTHESIS

The Musical Quarterly, 1966
The most valuable thing Jacques Handschin taught us was to mistrust our own systems. By instinct he dug out the exceptions, the anomalies, the cases that just did not fit. By instinct he provided each explanation with its antinomy, each potential system with an antidote.
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TROPES AND PHYSICS

Grazer Philosophische Studien, 2009
According to some (see Bacon (2002)), the notion of a trope—that is, of an ‘abstract particular’, or ‘particularized property’, not deriving from a universal—can be traced, among others, to Plato, Aristotle, Boethius, Avicenna, Saint Th omas, Scotus, Leibniz and Husserl.
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Aux origines des tropes d’interpolation: le trope méloforme d’introït

Revue de musicologie, 1978
Essai de definition du trope| especes, diverses selon les specialistes| examen des tropes du Temps pascal: St. Gallen, mss.381 et 484| Aquitaine| recherches sur l'origine. Exemples non transposes (neumes).
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Tropes

2002
Trope theory is the view that the world is (wholly or partly) constituted by so-called tropes, which are entities most often characterized as a kind of abstract particular or particular property. Very little is uncontroversial when it comes to tropes and the theory or theories in which tropes (not always so-called) figure.
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