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    Sound is not an event but a property of the event which p... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Sounds are properties of events (such as collisions) rather than being events themselves

    Sound is not an event but a property of the event which produces it

    PerceptionPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguagePerception

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    Sounds are properties of events (such as collisions) rather than being events th...The producing event (e.g., a collision) is the bearer of the sound property

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    Sounds are properties of events (such as collisions) rather than being...83%Sound is identical with its event source, not a proper part of a disti...81%The producing event (e.g., a collision) is the bearer of the sound pro...79%An event is conceived as something singular and non-repeatable, associ...78%

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    The Property View has contemporary endorsers (Pasnau 1999; although Pasnau takes sounds to be properties like colors, he comes close to the event view when he writes that sounds “either are the vibrations of [objects that have sounds], or supervene on those vibrations” [1999: 316]; indeed Pasnau 2007 rejoined the Event Theory). Leddington (2019) also defends a property view of sound within a distal view positions, since he claims that sound itself is not an event but it is a property of the even

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