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    Judgments of the form 'X is' or 'X is X' do not have dist... — Carmelics
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    Supports→In asking for the cause of X's being, one cannot seek a middle term between the subject and predicate of 'X is' or 'X is X' without first unpacking the judgment into one with distinct subject and predicate

    Judgments of the form 'X is' or 'X is X' do not have distinct subject and predicate until unpacked into a judgment about different things

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    SEP: al-farabi-metaphysics
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    In all of this Fârâbî is broadly following the Aristotelian idea that, for any composite object X, we can ask “what is X?” and answer the question either by giving a definition of X spelling X out into many in-some-sense-constituents of X, or by giving some one such constituent of X, which is a partial answer to “what is X?”.[28] Fârâbî is also following Aristotle in insisting that all of the things which should be mentioned in the definition of X are causes of X’s being (“the thing by which [

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