On the conceptual level, then, we can distinguish AGL and PGL by their treatment of statements of laws. In its general form, PGL holds that the locution ‘It is a law that’ has a wholly primitive status corresponding to the ontological primitives capable of satisfying it. According to AGL, the locution can be translated into different statements containing different primitive terms. For example, one who thinks of laws as relations between universals can translate ‘It is a law that all Fs are Gs’ into ‘Universal F stands in the relation of nomic necessitation to universal G’ (or something similar). In this analysis, the concept of lawhood is analyzed in terms of the supposedly more primitive concepts of universals and nomic necessitation.
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