more from this thinker     |     more from this text


Single Idea 17970

[filed under theme 18. Thought / D. Concepts / 4. Structure of Concepts / c. Classical concepts ]

Full Idea

The classical view of concepts has been tied to traditional logic. 'Fido is a dog and a pet' is true if it has the necessary and sufficient conditions for both, ...but there is empirical evidence that people do not follow that rule.

Gist of Idea

Classical concepts follow classical logic, but concepts in real life don't work that way

Source

Gregory L. Murphy (The Big Book of Concepts [2004], Ch. 2)

Book Ref

Murphy,Gregory L.: 'The Big Book of Concepts' [MIT 2004], p.26


A Reaction

Examples given are classifying chess as a sport and/or game, and classifying a tree house (which is agreed to be both a building and not a building!).


The 14 ideas with the same theme [concepts as necessary and sufficient conditions of groups]:

Analysis is finding necessary and sufficient conditions by studying possible cases [Jackson]
The essence of a concept is either its definition or its conceptual relations? [Mares]
The theoretical and practical definitions for the classical view are very hard to find [Murphy]
The classical definitional approach cannot distinguish typical and atypical category members [Murphy]
Classical concepts follow classical logic, but concepts in real life don't work that way [Murphy]
Classical concepts are transitive hierarchies, but actual categories may be intransitive [Murphy]
The classical core is meant to be the real concept, but actually seems unimportant [Murphy]
Classically, concepts give necessary and sufficient conditions for falling under them [Margolis/Laurence]
Typicality challenges the classical view; we see better fruit-prototypes in apples than in plums [Margolis/Laurence]
The classical theory explains acquisition, categorization and reference [Margolis/Laurence]
It may be that our concepts (such as 'knowledge') have no definitional structure [Margolis/Laurence]
Classical theory can't explain facts like typical examples being categorised quicker [Machery]
Classical theory implies variety in processing times, but this does not generally occur [Machery]
Many categories don't seem to have a definition [Machery]