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The good, the bad and the insignificant—assessing concept functions for conceptual engineering

Sigurd Jorem

2022Synthese39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Many theorists of conceptual engineering appeal to the functions, roles, purposes or aims of concepts to articulate how conceptual engineering ought to be done. The functional approach to conceptual engineering is well-motivated: It promises a good account of the limits of revision, and of what makes some concept good. In this paper, I raise a problem for the functional approach which concerns the existence of harmful and methodologically insignificant concept functions. I examine whether we can deal with these problematic functions by adopting a technical notion of function. I thus review the prospects for using the notions of a contextually stable function, of a designed function, of a proper function, and of a system function as our operative notion of function. None of them help us resolve the problem. On this basis, I argue that advocates of the functional approach should be committed to a comparatively weak claim, according to which functions must be assessed case-by-case, and that we are best served by employing an unsophisticated notion of function, according to which the function of a concept just is something the concept is used for.

Topics & Concepts

Function (biology)Philosophy of sciencePhilosophy of languageEpistemologyMetaphysicsAppealComputer scienceConceptual frameworkManagement sciencePhilosophyEngineeringPolitical scienceLawEvolutionary biologyBiologyBiomedical Text Mining and OntologiesSemantic Web and OntologiesPhilosophy and History of Science
The good, the bad and the insignificant—assessing concept functions for conceptual engineering | Litcius