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The Figure depicts a situation where each of the three objects, <math>x_1, x_2, x_3,\!</math> has a proper name that denotes it alone, namely, the three proper names <math>y_1, y_2, y_3,\!</math> respectively.  Over and above the objects denoted by their proper names, there is the general sign <math>y,\!</math> which denotes any and all of the objects <math>x_1, x_2, x_3.\!</math>  This kind of sign is described as a ''general name'' or a ''plural term'', and its relation to its objects is a ''general reference'' or a ''plural denotation''.
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The Figure depicts a situation where each of the three objects, <math>x_1, x_2, x_3,\!</math> has a ''proper name'' that denotes it alone, namely, the three proper names <math>y_1, y_2, y_3,\!</math> respectively.  Over and above the objects denoted by their proper names, there is the general sign <math>y,\!</math> which denotes any and all of the objects <math>x_1, x_2, x_3.\!</math>  This kind of sign is described as a ''general name'' or a ''plural term'', and its relation to its objects is a ''general reference'' or a ''plural denotation''.
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Now, at this stage of the game, if you ask:  ''Is the object of the sign <math>y\!</math> one or many?'', the answer has to be:  ''Not one, but many''.  That is, there is not one <math>x\!</math> that <math>y\!</math> denotes, but only the three <math>x\!</math>'s in the object space.  Nominal thinkers would ask:  ''Granted this, what need do we have really of more excess?''  The maxim of the nominal thinker is ''never read a general name as a name of a general'', meaning that we should never jump from the accidental circumstance of a plural sign <math>y\!</math> to the abnominal fact that a unit <math>x\!</math> exists.
    
<pre>
 
<pre>
Now, at this stage of the game, if you ask:
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"Is the object of the sign y one or many?",
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the answer has to be:  "Not one, but many".
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That is, there is not one x that y denotes,
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but only the three x's in the object space.
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Nominal thinkers would ask:  "Granted this,
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what need do we have really of more excess?"
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The maxim of the nominal thinker is "never
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read a general name as a name of a general",
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meaning that we should never jump from the
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accidental circumstance of a plural sign y
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to the abnominal fact that a unit x exists.
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In actual practice this would be just one segment of a much larger
 
In actual practice this would be just one segment of a much larger
 
sign relation, but let us continue to focus on just this one piece.
 
sign relation, but let us continue to focus on just this one piece.
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