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In logic and metaphysics, properties are attributes or characteristics, universals that may belong to one or many things at the same time. Properties have extensions, that is, a class of things to which they belong, which may be empty. But different properties (having a heart, having a liver) may characterize the same extensions. Much metaphysics circles around whether two apparently different properties can properly be regarded as one. Other parts tackle the question of the difference between the essential and the accidental properties of things. The problem of universals is an attempt to understand or even to abolish the distinction between particular things and their properties.

 
 
Wikipedia: property (philosophy)

In modern philosophy, mathematics, and logic, a property is an attribute of an object; thus a red object is said to have the property of redness. The property may be considered a form of object in its own right, able to possess other properties. Properties are therefore subject to the Russell's paradox/Grelling-Nelson paradox. It differs from the logical concept of class by not having any concept of extensionality, and from the philosophical concept of class in that a property is considered to be distinct from the objects which possess it.

In classical Aristotelian terminology, a property (proprium) is one of the Predicables. It is a non-essential quality of a species (like an accident), but a quality which is nevertheless characteristically present in members of that species (and in no others). For example, "ability to laugh" may be considered a special characteristic of human beings. However, "laughter" is not an essential quality of the species human, whose Aristotelian definition of "rational animal" does not require laughter. Thus, in the classical framework, properties are characteristic, but non-essential, qualities.

A property may be also described as determinate or determinable. A determinable is a property in a larger group of properties - for example, redness is a determinable property in the property of color. A determinate property is a property from which determinable (or more specific properties) are derived.

In mathematical terminology, given any element of a set X, a certain property p is either true or false. Formally, a property p: X → {true, false}. Any property gives rise in a natural way to the set {x: x has the property p} and the corresponding indicator function.

In tomato cultivation, a determinate cultivar is one that produces a single crop of fruit clustered around a single time in the season. Indeterminate cultivars produce fruit throughout the season.

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This article incorporates material from property on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the GFDL.


 
 

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Philosophy Dictionary. The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy. Copyright © 1994, 1996, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Property (philosophy)" Read more

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