Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun One who is interested in or deals with actualities; a realist: opposed to idealist.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun One who deals with or considers actually existing facts and conditions, rather than fancies or theories; a realist; -- opposed to idealist.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun A proponent of actualism.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Plantinga's version of actualist representationism faces its own version of the Quinean challenge, namely, the problem of specifying the individual essences which are supposed to replace non-actual possible objects.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • This line of thought affords actualist representationists a powerful means to accommodate many apparently recalcitrant modal truths about non-actual possible objects, provided that these non-actual possible objects can be individuated uniquely by means of actually existing potential parts or origin.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • In actualist representationism, existence is conceptually prior to actual existence.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • The trouble for actualist representationism is that there is no obvious way to make sense of the pronoun ˜it™ in (b).

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • Let us examine how actualist representationists handle apparent modal truths asserting the possibility of non-actual objects.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • If those actualist representationists are right and consistency is indeed a modal notion, then actualist representationism is not a reductionist theory of modality.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • If we understand Zalta's theory this way, we have the following actualist picture: All objects are actual and existing, some objects are necessarily non-spatial, and other objects are possibly spatial and possibly non-spatial.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • This involves a nested possibility, which is troublesome to actualist representationism

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • The talk of abstract objects may be vaguely reminiscent of actualist representationism, which employs representations, which are actual abstract objects.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

  • Most of those who advertise their positions as actualist hold not only (5) with the most comprehensive domain of discourse in mind but also (1), and therefore (2) - (4) as well.

    Possible Objects Yagisawa, Takashi 2009

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