An idea · Medieval · first attested 1320
Nominalism
Universals are names, not things.
Realists hold that universals like "redness" or "humanity" exist independently of the things that have them. Nominalists deny this: only particulars exist; "red" is a label we apply to red things because they resemble each other. The medieval problem of universals is one of the great philosophical disputes, and modern philosophy of language still works in its shadow.