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Essentia

Essentia is the Latin term for essence, used in philosophy to denote the defining nature of a thing—the set of properties that make something what it is, and without which it would not be that kind of thing. An essence is contrasted with accidental or contingent properties, which may change without altering the object's basic kind.

Historically, Aristotle treated form as the principle that organizes matter, giving a thing its identity. In

In contemporary metaphysics, debates persist over whether essences are mind-independent features of reality or constructs of

The concept remains central to discussions of classification, science, and ontology. It informs questions about what

later
scholastic
philosophy,
the
term
essentia
was
used
to
distinguish
what
a
thing
is
(its
essence)
from
that
it
exists
(its
esse).
This
distinction
underpinned
essentialist
accounts
of
natural
kinds,
where
entities
were
thought
to
possess
a
fixed
set
of
essential
properties
that
define
their
kind.
language
and
thought.
Some
philosophers
defend
essentialism
for
natural
kinds,
mathematics,
or
necessary
properties;
others
critique
it
through
nominalism
or
anti-essentialism,
arguing
that
many
properties
are
not
essential
to
membership
in
a
kind
or
that
kinds
are
better
understood
as
cluster
concepts
rather
than
fixed
essences.
it
means
for
a
thing
to
be
that
thing
and
which
properties
are
indispensable
to
its
identity,
shaping
arguments
in
areas
ranging
from
metaphysics
to
philosophy
of
science.