Shifting Concepts
Shifting Concepts
The Philosophy and Psychology of Conceptual Variability
Wikforss, Asa; Marques, Teresa
Oxford University Press
09/2020
304
Dura
Inglês
9780198803331
15 a 20 dias
582
Part I. How Concepts Shift: Variation Across Individuals, Times, and Contexts
1: Barbara C. Malt: Mapping Thoughts to Words: Cross-Language Differences, Learning, and Communication
2: Gregory L. Murphy: How to Make Psychological Generalizations When Concepts Differ: A Case Study of Conceptual Development
3: Peter Pagin: When does communication succeed? The case of general terms
4: James A. Hampton: Investigating Differences in People's Concept Representations
5: Yasmina Jraissati: Color Categories in Context
6: Zed Adams and Nat Hansen: The Myth of the Common-Sense Conception of Colour
7: Daniel Cohnitz and Jussi Haukioja: Variation in Natural Kind Concepts
Part II. To Shift a Concept: Conceptual Revolution, Amelioration, and Perversion
8: Joshua Glasgow: Conceptual Revolution
9: Edouard Machery and Luc Faucher: The Folk Concept of Race
10: Esa Diaz-Leon: On the Conceptual Mismatch Argument: Descriptions, Disagreement, and Amelioration
11: Robin O. Andreasen: Conceptual Fragmentation and the Use of 'Race' in Scientific Theorizing
12: Sally Haslanger: How Not to Change the Subject
13: Teresa Marques: Amelioration vs. Perversion
Part I. How Concepts Shift: Variation Across Individuals, Times, and Contexts
1: Barbara C. Malt: Mapping Thoughts to Words: Cross-Language Differences, Learning, and Communication
2: Gregory L. Murphy: How to Make Psychological Generalizations When Concepts Differ: A Case Study of Conceptual Development
3: Peter Pagin: When does communication succeed? The case of general terms
4: James A. Hampton: Investigating Differences in People's Concept Representations
5: Yasmina Jraissati: Color Categories in Context
6: Zed Adams and Nat Hansen: The Myth of the Common-Sense Conception of Colour
7: Daniel Cohnitz and Jussi Haukioja: Variation in Natural Kind Concepts
Part II. To Shift a Concept: Conceptual Revolution, Amelioration, and Perversion
8: Joshua Glasgow: Conceptual Revolution
9: Edouard Machery and Luc Faucher: The Folk Concept of Race
10: Esa Diaz-Leon: On the Conceptual Mismatch Argument: Descriptions, Disagreement, and Amelioration
11: Robin O. Andreasen: Conceptual Fragmentation and the Use of 'Race' in Scientific Theorizing
12: Sally Haslanger: How Not to Change the Subject
13: Teresa Marques: Amelioration vs. Perversion