To what does the plural referring expression, 'the cats in my house,' refer? Not to plurality, but to a plurality. A plurality is one item, not many items. It is one item with many members. 'The guitars in my house' refers to a numerically different plurality. It too refers to one item with many members. It follows that a plurality cannot be identical to its members. For if it were there would be no 'it.'
I am not saying that a plurality is a mathematical set. I am saying that a plurality is not just its members. I am rejecting Composition as Identity. If the Londonistas do not agree with the Phoenician on this one, then I fear that there is little point to further discussion. We are at the non-negotiable. We are at bedrock and "my spade is turned."
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