The Function of Scientific Concepts

IF 0.9 4区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Hyundeuk Cheon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The function of concepts must be taken seriously to understand the scientific practices of developing and working with concepts. Despite its significance, little philosophical attention has been paid to the function of concepts. A notable exception is Brigandt (2010), who suggests incorporating the epistemic goal pursued with the concept’s use as an additional semantic property along with the reference and inferential role. The suggestion, however, has at least two limitations. First, his proposal to introduce epistemic goals as the third component of concepts lacks independent grounding, except to account for the rationality of semantic change (the Grounding Problem). Second, it is hardly justified to consider epistemic goals as a semantic property (the Misplacement Problem). To remedy these predicaments, we suggest a new perspective that takes concepts as cognitive entities with a 2-layered structure rather than as merely linguistic entities and develop an account of the function of concepts. We provide empirical evidence showing that functional information affects our cognitive processes. It is claimed that the function of concepts is not a semantic property but a type of meta-information regulating a body of concept-constitutive information.

科学概念的功能
要理解发展和使用概念的科学实践,必须认真对待概念的功能。尽管概念具有重要意义,但哲学对其功能的关注却很少。一个值得注意的例外是Brigandt(2010),他建议将追求的认知目标与概念的使用结合起来,作为参考和推理作用的额外语义属性。然而,这个建议至少有两个局限性。首先,他提出的将认知目标作为概念的第三个组成部分的建议缺乏独立的基础,除了考虑语义变化的合理性(基础问题)。其次,将认知目标视为语义属性(错位问题)几乎是不合理的。为了弥补这些困境,我们提出了一种新的视角,即将概念视为具有两层结构的认知实体,而不仅仅是语言实体,并发展了概念功能的解释。我们提供的经验证据表明,功能性信息影响我们的认知过程。概念的功能不是一种语义属性,而是一种调节概念构成信息体的元信息。
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来源期刊
Foundations of Science
Foundations of Science HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: Foundations of Science focuses on methodological and philosophical topics of foundational significance concerning the structure and the growth of science. It serves as a forum for exchange of views and ideas among working scientists and theorists of science and it seeks to promote interdisciplinary cooperation. Since the various scientific disciplines have become so specialized and inaccessible to workers in different areas of science, one of the goals of the journal is to present the foundational issues of science in a way that is free from unnecessary technicalities yet faithful to the scientific content. The aim of the journal is not simply to identify and highlight foundational issues and problems, but to suggest constructive solutions to the problems. The editors of the journal admit that various sciences have approaches and methods that are peculiar to those individual sciences. However, they hold the view that important truths can be discovered about and by the sciences and that truths transcend cultural and political contexts. Although properly conducted historical and sociological inquiries can explain some aspects of the scientific enterprise, the editors believe that the central foundational questions of contemporary science can be posed and answered without recourse to sociological or historical methods.
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