Conceptual Engineering and Conceptual Ethics
豆瓣
Alexis Burgess / Herman Cappelen …
简介
Conceptual engineering and conceptual ethics are branches of philosophy concerned with questions about how to assess and ameliorate our representational devices (such as concepts and words). It is a part of philosophy that examines which concepts we should use (and why), how concepts can be improved, when concepts should be abandoned, and how proposals for amelioration can be implemented. Central parts of the history of philosophy have engaged with these issues, but the focus of this volume is on applications to work in contemporary philosophy of language and mind, epistemology, metaphilosophy, gender and race theory, ethics, philosophy of science, and philosophical logic. This is the first volume devoted entirely to conceptual engineering and conceptual ethics. It consists of twenty chapters written by leading philosophers, which explore the possibilities, benefits, problems, and applications of these influential branches of philosophy.
目录
1: Introduction: A Guided Tour of Conceptual Engineering and Conceptual Ethics, Herman Cappelen and David Plunkett
2: Revisionary Analysis without Meaning Change (Or, Could Women Be Analytically Oppressed?), Derek Ball
3: Minimal Substantivity, Delia Belleri
4: Reactive Concepts: engineering the concept , David Braddon-Mitchell
5: Strategic Conceptual Engineering for Epistemic and Social Aims, Ingo Brigandt and Esther Rosario
6: Never Say 'Never Say "Never"'?, Alexis Burgess
7: Conceptual Engineering: The Master Argument, Herman Cappelen
8: Preliminary Scouting Reports from the Outer Limits of Conceptual Engineering, Josh Dever
9: Descriptive vs. Ameliorative Projects: The Role of Normative Considerations, Esa Díaz-León
10: Variance Theses in Ontology and Metaethics, Matti Eklund
11: Neutralism and Conceptual Engineering, Patrick Greenough
12: Going On, Not in the Same Way, Sally Haslanger
13: The Theory-Theory Approach to Ethics, Frank Jackson
14: Conceptual Ethics and the Methodology of Normative Inquiry, Tristram McPherson and David Plunkett
15: Conceptual Evaluation: Epistemic, Alejandro Pérez Carballo
16: Analyzing Concepts and Allocating Referents, Philip Pettit
17: The A-project and the B-project, Mark Richard
18: Talk and Thought, Sarah Sawyer
19: Philosophy as the Study of Defective Concepts, Kevin Scharp
20: Linguistic Intervention and Transformative Communicative Disruptions, Rachel Katharine Sterken
21: Pragmatic Method for Conceptual Ethics, Amie L. Thomasson