Abstract
Universalism is the thesis that composition is unrestricted: for any non‐overlapping objects, those objects compose something. One of the most influential arguments for universalism is the argument from vagueness, first advanced by David Lewis and later elaborated and defended by Theodore Sider. I supply a reconstruction of the argument and survey a variety of responses to it.
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CITATION STYLE
APA
Korman, D. Z. (2010). The Argument from Vagueness. Philosophy Compass, 5(10), 891–901. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-9991.2010.00327.x
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