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Are Natural Kind Terms Ambiguous?

Jussi Haukioja, Jeske Toorman, Giosuè Baggio, Jussi Jylkkä

2023Cognitive Science27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Recent experimental studies have claimed to find evidence for the view that natural kind terms such as “water” are ambiguous: that they have two extensions, one determined by superficial properties, the other by underlying essence. In an online experiment, we presented to 600 participants scenarios describing discoveries of novel samples that differ in deep structure from samples of a familiar kind but are superficially identical, such as a water‐like substance that is not composed of H 2 O. We used three different types of question sets to probe whether the participants considered the sample as a member of the kind or not. Our results did not confirm the predictions of the ambiguity view. They were, rather, consistent with views that take underlying essences to be the sole criterion for membership in a natural kind.

Topics & Concepts

AmbiguityNatural (archaeology)Sample (material)EpistemologyPsychologyArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceCognitive psychologyMathematicsPhilosophyLinguisticsHistoryPhysicsArchaeologyThermodynamicsAdvanced Text Analysis TechniquesChild and Animal Learning DevelopmentPhilosophy and History of Science
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