organisms,  although    this    does    not mean    that    the ontology    of  vague   objects is
uncontested.    Vague   objects can be  conceived   as  persisting  through time    and
being   identical   with    themselves  only    in  the non-Leibnizian  sense   that    they    have
temporal    parts.  They    are comparable  to  social  entities    such    as  cities, political
parties,    nations,    and tribes, which   lack    sharp   boundaries  as  the relations   of
membership  in  these   entities    is  indeterminate.  Fuzzy   logic   attempts    to  make    up
for the shortcomings    of  classical   logic,  while   holding on  to  a   concept of  identity
which,  while   admitting   vagueness,  is  still   based   on  the individual.
Non-Western approaches
As  the discussion  so  far has shown,  the question    of  identity    in  logic   cannot  easily
be  separated   from    the question    of  a   coherent    worldview.  It  is  not surprising,
therefore,  that    outside classical   logic   we  find    different   conceptions of  ‘identity’.
In  Buddhist    philosophy  as  developed   by  Dignāga (480    CE–540  CE) and
Dharmakīrti (died   660 CE),    for example,    identity    plays   a   role    as  identity    of
essence and identity    of  extension,  much    as  in  Frege’s logic   of  sense   and
reference.  However,    the thinking    on  which   these   concepts    rest    is  distinctive.
In  the Aristotelian    tradition,  the individual  is  the basis   of  all classification  and
hence   of  all thought.    The problem of  vagueness   leads   to  the somewhat    artificial
construction    of  the self-sameness   of  individuals that    persist through time    by
virtue  of  having  temporal    parts.  In  Buddhist    logic,  by  contrast,   the
impermanence    of  all being   is  the point   of  departure.  Like    Western thinkers,
Buddhist    philosophers    grappled    with    the problem of  how cognition,  language,
and the world   are related;    however,    unlike  the former, the latter  do  not take    as
given   the ‘world  out there’, and they    do  not proceed from    the assumption  that    its
secrets are for us  to  uncover.    Ultimate    knowledge   of  the material    world   is  not
possible.   A   consequence for the notion  of  ‘individual’    acknowledged    by  many
Buddhist    philosophers    is  that,   rather  than    being   characterized   by  positive
properties, the individual  is  characterized   negatively. The doctrine    of  non-self
(Sanskrit   anātman)    is  at  the heart   of  identity    (Sanskrit   tādātmya).
Identity is established by exclusion:
(7)          ,
x   is  not not-x.