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Qua

Qua is a Latin term meaning "in the capacity of" or "as" and is used in philosophy and related disciplines to indicate that a statement concerns something in a particular role, respect, or aspect rather than in general terms.

In English philosophical writing, either "x qua y" or "x, qua y" marks that x is being

The qua construction is helpful for analyses of essence, function, or identity across contexts, and it's common

Etymology: borrowed from Latin qua meaning "in which" or "in what respect." Though widely used in scholarly

considered
as
a
y—
for
example,
"Socrates
qua
man
is
mortal"
asserts
mortality
when
Socrates
is
understood
as
a
man,
not
necessarily
when
he
is
regarded
as
a
philosopher
or
citizen.
This
usage
helps
separate
distinct
predicates
about
the
same
individual.
in
metaphysics,
ethics,
and
philosophy
of
mind.
It
also
features
in
logic
and
semantics
to
delimit
scope
and
avoid
conflating
properties
that
hold
only
in
one
capacity
with
those
that
hold
generally.
prose,
qua
is
a
stylistic
device
rather
than
a
theory,
and
its
overuse
can
obscure
arguments
if
not
clearly
motivated.