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According to Lynne Rudder Baker’s constitution theory, all artworks and artefacts are constituted intention-dependent (ID) objects which are irreducibly real and cannot be reduced to the collections of particles which make them up. The constitution theory of ID objects is based on Baker’s theory of practical realism according to which our everyday life-world is a resource for metaphysics. This paper will focus on the problem of ontological relativism entailed by the constitution theory of intention-dependent objects. The author will argue, by way of an example, that the constitution theory of intention-dependent objects entails ontological relativism. That is because everyday life worlds vary from culture to culture. Finally, he examines if there is any possibility for the constitution theorist to avoid the problem of ontological relativism. The author discusses Baker’s idea of a thin common sense framework.
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