Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
Or it may work on concepts that are not the province of science at all, but still play central roles in human life – concepts such as art, freedom, responsibility, consciousness, or person.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
clarifying, modifying and developing concepts for use in the empirical work of the sciences.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
Conceptual engineering projects have broadened greatly in scope since Carnap’s beginnings, including not only attempts to (re-)engineer scientific concepts, but also social concepts, logical concepts, and other philosophical concepts.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
That is to think that philosophy is not concerned with quasi-scientific discoveries, but rather with analyzing our language or concepts. Two of the great philosophical movements of the early to mid-twentieth century – Phenomenology and Ordinary Language Philosophy – took something like this approach, while philosophers as diverse as Husserl, Ayer,... See more
Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
Philosophy 21st century
These are cases of what David Plunkett and Tim Sundell call “Metalinguistic Negotiation”: where we use words implicitly in order to negotiate for how (or whether) these terms ought to be used.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
or if we might do better with changing our concept of truth, or freedom, or death, or marriage, or intelligence.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
Our terms and concepts serve as tools – not just to report on or investigate the world, but to do many things: to greet, express our attitudes, communicate rules of games or rules of inference, make calculations, organize our laws and social lives, and much more.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
systemic functional linguistics may help us identify linguistic functions; historical linguistics may help us identify what processes underlie natural linguistic change, so that we can hope to exploit these in inducing change.
Amie L. Thomasson • Philosophy as Conceptual Engineering
Or it may focus on reconstructing our old concepts in a changed context – in the current social and technological context, what concepts do we need of intelligence, privacy, information, disease, and so on?