Existence in Meinongianism and Necessitism: A Merely Verbal Dispute

Abstract

On the one hand, according to Meinongianism, there are two types of objects: those that exist and those that do not (which subsist). Moreover, among the objects that subsist, there is a special class of entities that are ‘beyond being’ (Nichtsein), such as impossible objects and fictional objects. On the other hand, according to necessitism, there are two types of objects: those that S-exist and those that L-exist. Furthermore, there is a third category of objects that do not L-exist, as their intended terms fail to refer—such as impossible objects and fictional objects.
In this discussion, I will argue that the dispute between the Meinongianist and the Necessitist regarding the significance of existence is merely verbal and that both frameworks ultimately endorse a three-category ontology.

Downloads

Keine Nutzungsdaten vorhanden.
##submission.viewcitations##

##submission.format##

##submission.crossmark##

##submission.metrics##

Veröffentlicht
2026-02-16
Zitationsvorschlag
Conde Borrego V. (2026). Existence in Meinongianism and Necessitism: A Merely Verbal Dispute. Revista de Filosofía, Avance en línea, 1-6. https://doi.org/10.5209/resf.101106
Rubrik
Artículos