incar
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Coined by American philosopher Eli Hirsch in 1982 in The Concept of Identity, formed by in- + car.
Noun
[edit]incar (plural incars)
- (metaphysics, linguistics) A car completely inside of a garage, or the portion of a car that is inside a garage.
- 2006, John Hawthorne, Metaphysical Essays, →ISBN, page vii:
- This is not to deny that we might initially be sceptical of the existence of objects like the outcars and incars entertained by Eli Hirsch, objects that grow and shrink as a car leaves its garage. But we don’t think it ridiculous that there are objects that grow and shrink as large rocks move underwater […] It seems clear that none but the most insular metaphysician should countenance islands while repudiating incars.
- 2020, Jody Azzouni, “Defending the Existence of Ordinary Existence Questions and Debates”, in Ricki Bliss, J.T.M. Miller, editors, The Routledge Handbook of Metametaphysics[1], →ISBN:
- A thinks that werewolves exist; B doesn’t; A thinks incars and outcars exist, but not cars; B thinks vice versa; A thinks ordinary objects exist, but not mereological sums of them; B thinks both exist.