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Full Idea
We have three different ways in which we arrive at concepts or universals: there is a clarification, where we have a ready-made concept and define it; we have a combination (where a definition creates a concept); and an experience can lead to a habit.
Gist of Idea
We reach concepts by clarification, or by definition, or by habitual experience
Source
H.H. Price (Review of Aron 'Our Knowledge of Universals' [1946], p.190)
Book Ref
-: 'Philosophy' [-], p.190
A Reaction
[very compressed] He cites Russell as calling the third one a 'condensed induction'. There seems to an intellectualist and non-intellectualist strand in the abstractionist tradition.
19372 | Concepts are ordered, and show eternal possibilities, deriving from God [Leibniz, by Arthur,R] |
16912 | Some concepts can be made a priori, which are general thoughts of objects, like quantity or cause [Kant] |
24129 | We start with images, then words, and then concepts, to which emotions attach [Nietzsche] |
23187 | Whatever their origin, concepts survive by being useful [Nietzsche] |
19633 | We use concepts to master our fears; saying 'death' releases us from confronting it [Cioran] |
10645 | We reach concepts by clarification, or by definition, or by habitual experience [Price,HH] |
8781 | The mind does not lift concepts from experience; it creates them, and then applies them [Geach] |
11859 | The mind conceptualizes objects; yet objects impinge upon the mind [Wiggins] |
12658 | Nobody knows how concepts are acquired [Fodor] |
17722 | The concept 'red' is tied to what actually individuates red things [Peacocke] |
5793 | Concepts and generalisations result from brain 'global mapping' by 'reentry' [Edelman/Tononi, by Searle] |
4926 | Concepts arise when the brain maps its own activities [Edelman/Tononi] |