Dictionary Definition
concept n : an abstract or general idea inferred
or derived from specific instances [syn: conception, construct] [ant: misconception]
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈkɒn.sɛpt/ /"kQn.sEpt/
Noun
- Something understood, and retained in the mind, from experience, reasoning and/or imagination; a generalization (generic, basic form), or abstraction (mental impression), of a particular set of instances or occurrences (specific, though different, recorded manifestations of the concept).
Synonyms
Something understood and retained in the mind
Extensive Definition
The term "concept" is traced back to 1550–60 (l.
conceptum - something conceived), but what is today termed "the
classical theory of concepts" is the theory of Aristotle on the
definition of terms. As the term is used in mainstream cognitive
science and philosophy
of mind, a concept or conception is an abstract idea or a mental symbol, typically associated with
a corresponding representation in a
language or symbology. Concept has also
been defined as a unit of knowledge built from characteristics.
Introduction
A vast array of accounts attempt to explain the nature of concepts. According to classical accounts, a concept denotes all of the entities, phenomena, and/or relations in a given category or class by using definitions. Concepts are abstract in that they omit the differences of the things in their extension, treating the members of the extension as if they were identical. Classical concepts are universal in that they apply equally to every thing in their extension. Concepts are also the basic elements of propositions, much the same way a word is the basic semantic element of a sentence. Unlike perceptions, which are particular images of individual objects, concepts cannot be visualized. Because they are not themselves individual perceptions, concepts are discursive and result from reason.Concepts are expected to be useful in dealing
with reality. Generally speaking, concepts are taken to be (a)
acquired dispositions to recognize perceived objects as being of
this kind or of that ontological kind, and at the
same time (b) to understand what this kind or that kind of object
is like, and consequently (c) to perceive a number of perceived
particulars as being the same in kind and to discriminate between
them and other sensible particulars that are different in kind. In
addition, concepts are acquired dispositions to understand what
certain kinds of objects are like both (a) when the objects, though
perceptible, are not actually perceived, and (b) also when they are
not perceptible at all, as is the case with all the conceptual
constructs we employ in physics, mathematics, and metaphysics. The
impetus to have a theory of concepts that is ontologically useful
has been so strong that it has pushed forward accounts that
understand a concept to have a deep connection with reality.
On some accounts, there may be agents (perhaps
some animals) which don't think about, but rather use relatively
basic concepts (such as demonstrative and perceptual concepts for
things in their perceptual field), even though it is generally
assumed that they do not think in symbols. On other accounts,
mastery of symbolic thought (in particular, language) is a
prerequisite for conceptual thought.
Concepts are bearers of meaning,
as opposed to agents of
meaning. A single concept can be expressed by any number of
languages. The concept
of DOG can be expressed as dog in English,
Hund in German,
as chien in French,
and perro in Spanish.
The fact that concepts are in some sense independent of language
makes translation
possible - words in various languages have identical meaning,
because they express one and the same concept.
A term labels or designates
concepts. Several partly or fully distinct concepts may share the
same term. These different concepts are easily confused by
mistakenly being used interchangeably, which is a fallacy. Also, the concepts of
term and concept are often confused, although the two are not the
same.
The acquisition of concepts is studied in
machine
learning as supervised
classification and unsupervised
classification, and in psychology and cognitive science as
concept
learning and category formation. In the
philosophy of Kant, any purely empirical theory dealing with
the acquisition of concepts is referred to as a noogony.
Origin and acquisition of concepts
A posteriori abstractions
John Locke's
description of a general idea corresponds to a description of a
concept. According to Locke, a general idea is created by
abstracting, drawing away, or removing the common characteristic or
characteristics from several particular ideas. This common
characteristic is that which is similar to all of the different
individuals. For example, the abstract general idea or concept that
is designated by the word "red" is that characteristic which is
common to apples, cherries, and blood. The abstract general idea or
concept that is signified by the word "dog" is the collection of
those characteristics which are common to Airedales, Collies, and
Chihuahuas.
In the same tradition as Locke, John
Stuart Mill stated that general conceptions are formed through
abstraction. A general conception is the common element among the
many images of members of a class. "...[W]hen we form a set of
phenomena into a class, that is, when we compare them with one
another to ascertain in what they agree, some general conception is
implied in this mental operation" (A
System of Logic, Book IV, Ch. II). Mill did not believe that
concepts exist in the mind before the act of abstraction. "It is
not a law of our intellect, that, in comparing things with each
other and taking note of their agreement, we merely recognize as
realised in the outward world something that we already had in our
minds. The conception originally found its way to us as the result
of such a comparison. It was obtained (in metaphysical phrase) by
abstraction from individual things" (Ibid.).
For Schopenhauer,
empirical concepts "...are mere abstractions from what is known
through intuitive perception, and they have
arisen from our arbitrarily thinking away or dropping of some
qualities and our
retention of others." (Parerga
and Paralipomena, Vol. I, "Sketch of a History of the Ideal and the
Real"). In
his On
the Will in Nature, "Physiology and Pathology," Schopenhauer
said that a concept is "drawn off from previous images ... by
putting off their differences. This concept is then no longer
intuitively perceptible, but is denoted and fixed merely by words."
Nietzsche, who
was heavily influenced by Schopenhauer, wrote: "Every concept
originates through our equating what is unequal. No leaf ever
wholly equals another, and the concept 'leaf' is formed through an
arbitrary abstraction from these individual differences, through
forgetting the distinctions… ."
By contrast to the above philosophers, Immanuel
Kant held that the account of the concept as an abstraction of
experience is only partly correct. He called those concepts that
result of abstraction "a posteriori concepts" (meaning concepts
that arise out of experience). An empirical or an a posteriori
concept is a general representation (Vorstellung) or non-specific
thought of that which is common to several specific perceived
objects. (Logic, I, 1., §1,
Note 1)
A concept is a common feature or characteristic.
Kant investigated the way that empirical a posteriori concepts are
created.
Kant's description of the making of a concept has
been paraphrased as "… to conceive is essentially to think in
abstraction what is common to a plurality of possible instances… ."
(H.J. Paton, Kant's Metaphysics of Experience, I, 250). In his
discussion of Kant, Christopher Janaway wrote: "… generic concepts
are formed by abstraction from more than one species."
A priori concepts
Kant declared that human minds possess pure or a priori concepts. Instead of being abstracted from individual perceptions, like empirical concepts, they originate in the mind itself. He called these concepts categories, in the sense of the word that means predicate, attribute, characteristic, or quality. But these pure categories are predicates of things in general, not of a particular thing. According to Kant, there are 12 categories that constitute the understanding of phenomenal objects. Each category is that one predicate which is common to multiple empirical concepts. In order to explain how an a priori concept can relate to individual phenomena, in a manner analogous to an a posteriori concept, Kant employed the technical concept of the schema.Conceptual structure
It seems intuitively obvious that concepts must have some kind of structure. Up until recently, the dominant view of conceptual structure was a containment model, associated with the classical view of concepts. According to this model, a concept is endowed with certain necessary and sufficient conditions in their description which unequivocally determine an extension. The containment model allows for no degrees; a thing is either in, or out, of the concept's extension. By contrast, the inferential model understands conceptual structure to be determined in a graded manner, according to the tendency of the concept to be used in certain kinds of inferences. As a result, concepts do not have a kind of structure that is in terms of necessary and sufficient conditions; all conditions are contingent. (Margolis:5)However, some theorists claim that primitive
concepts lack any structure at all. For instance, Jerry Fodor
presents his Asymmetric Dependence Theory as a way of showing how a
primitive concept's content is determined by a reliable
relationship between the information in mental contents and the
world. These sorts of claims are referred to as "atomistic",
because the primitive concept is treated as if it were a genuine
atom.
Conceptual content
Content as pragmatic role
A concept may be abstracted from several
perceptions, but that is only its origin. In regard to its meaning
or its truth, William
James proposed his Pragmatic
Rule. This rule states that the meaning of a concept may always
be found in some particular difference in the course of human
experience which its being true will make (Some
Problems of Philosophy, "Percept and Concept -- The Import of
Concepts"). In order to understand the meaning of the concept and
to discuss its importance, a concept may be tested by asking, "What
sensible difference to anybody will its truth make?" There is only
one criterion of a concept's meaning and only one test of its
truth. That criterion or test is its consequences for human
behavior.
In this way, James bypassed the controversy
between rationalists
and empiricists
regarding the origin of concepts. Instead of solving their dispute,
he ignored it. The rationalists had asserted that concepts are a
revelation of Reason. Concepts are
a glimpse of a different world, one which contains timeless
truths in areas such as
logic, mathematics, ethics, and aesthetics. By pure thought,
humans can discover the relations that really exist among the parts
of that divine world. On the other hand, the empiricists claimed
that concepts were merely a distillation or abstraction from
perceptions of the world of experience. Therefore, the significance
of concepts depends solely on the perceptions that are its
references. James's Pragmatic Rule does not connect the meaning of
a concept with its origin. Instead, it relates the meaning to a
concept's purpose, that is, its function, use, or result.
Embodied content
In Cognitive
linguistics, abstract concepts are transformations of concrete
concepts derived from embodied experience. The mechanism of
transformation is structural mapping, in which properties of two or
more source domains are selectively mapped onto a blended space
(Fauconnier & Turner, 1995; see conceptual
blending). A common class of blends are metaphors. This theory
contrasts with the rationalist view that concepts are perceptions
(or recollections, in Plato's term) of an
independently existing world of ideas, in that it denies the
existence of any such realm. It also contrasts with the empiricist
view that concepts are abstract generalizations of individual
experiences, because the contingent and bodily experience is
preserved in a concept, and not abstracted away. While the
perspective is compatible with
Jamesian pragmatism (above), the notion of the transformation
of embodied concepts through structural mapping makes a distinct
contribution to the problem of concept formation.
Philosophical implications
Concepts and metaphilosophy
A long and well-established tradition in philosophy posits that philosophy itself is nothing more than conceptual analysis. This view has its proponents in contemporary literature as well as historical. According to Deleuze and Guattari's What Is Philosophy? (1991), philosophy is the activity of creating concepts. This creative activity differs from previous definitions of philosophy as simple reasoning, communication or contemplation of Universals. Concepts are specific to philosophy: science has got "percepts", and art "affects". A concept is always signed: thus, Descartes' Cogito or Kant's "transcendental". It is a singularity, not an universal, and connects itself with others concepts, on a "plane of immanence" traced by a particular philosophy. Concepts can jump from one plane of immanence to another, combining with other concepts and therefore engaging in a "becoming-Other."Concepts in epistemology
details
List of concepts in science Concepts are vital to the
development of scientific knowledge. For example, it would be
difficult to imagine physics without concepts like: energy, force, or acceleration. Concepts help
to integrate apparently unrelated observations and phenomena into viable
hypothesis and theories, the basic ingredients of science. The
concept
map is a tool that is used to help researchers visualize the
inter-relationships between various concepts.
Ontology of concepts
Although the mainstream literature in cognitive science regards the concept as a kind of mental particular, it has been suggested by some theorists that concepts are real things. (Margolis:8) In most radical form, the realist about concepts attempts to show that the supposedly mental processes are not mental at all; rather, they are abstract entities, which are just as real as any mundane object.Plato was the
starkest proponent of the realist thesis of universal concepts. By
his view, concepts (and ideas in general) are innate ideas that
were instantiations of a transcendental world of pure forms that
laid behind the veil of the physical world. In this way, universals
were explained as transcendent objects. Needless to say this form
of realism was tied deeply with Plato's ontological projects. This
remark on Plato is not of merely historical interest. For example,
the view that numbers are Platonic objects was revived by Kurt Godel as
a result of certain puzzles that he took to arise from the
phenomenological accounts.
Gottlob
Frege, founder of the analytic tradition in philosophy,
famously argued for the analysis of language in terms of sense and
reference. For him, the sense of an expression in language
describes a certain state of affairs in the world, namely, the way
that some object is presented. Since many commentators view the
notion of sense as identical to the notion of concept, and Frege
regards senses as the linguistic representations of states of
affairs in the world, it seems to follow that we may understand
concepts as the manner in which we grasp the world. Accordingly,
concepts (as senses) have an ontological status. (Morgolis:7)
According to Carl
Benjamin Boyer, in the introduction to his The History of the
Calculus and its Conceptual Development, concepts in calculus do
not refer to perceptions. As long as the concepts are useful and
mutually compatible, they are accepted on their own. For example,
the concepts of the derivative and the integral are not considered to
refer to spatial or temporal perceptions of the external world of
experience. Neither are they related in any way to mysterious
limits
in which quantities are on the verge of nascence or evanescence,
that is, coming into or going out of appearance or existence. The
abstract concepts are now considered to be totally autonomous, even
though they originated from the process of abstracting or taking
away qualities from perceptions until only the common, essential
attributes remained.
See also
- Abstraction
- Categorization
- Class (philosophy)
- Concept and object
- Concept car
- Concept learning
- Concept map
- Concept single
- Conceptual art
- Conceptual blending
- Conceptual clustering
- Conceptual framework
- Conveyed concept
- Formal concept analysis
- Fuzzy concept
- Hypostatic abstraction
- Idea
- Meme
- Misconception
- Philosophy
- Prescisive abstraction
- Schema (Kant)
- Social construction
- Symbol grounding problem
References
Publications
- The History of Calculus and its Conceptual Development, Carl Benjamin Boyer, Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-60509-4
- The Writings of William James, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-39188-4
- Logic, Immanuel Kant, Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-25650-2
- A System of Logic, John Stuart Mill, University Press of the Pacific, ISBN 1-4102-0252-6
- Parerga and Paralipomena, Arthur Schopenhauer, Volume I, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-824508-4
- What is Philosophy?, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari
- Kant's Metaphysic of Experience, H.J. Paton, London: Allen & Unwin, 1936
- "Conceptual Integration Networks." Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner, 1998. Cognitive Science. Volume 22, number 2 (April-June 1998), pages 133-187.
- The Portable Nietzsche, Penguin Books, 1982, ISBN 0-14-015062-5
- Stephen Laurence and Eric Margolis. "Concepts and Cognitive Science" . In Concepts: Core Readings, MIT Press, pp. 3-81, 1999.
External links
- E. Margolis and S. Lawrence (2006),
- Blending and Conceptual Integration
- v:Conceptualize: A Wikiversity Learning Project
concept in Catalan: Concepte
concept in Czech: Pojem
concept in Danish: Begreb
concept in German: Begriff
concept in Estonian: Mõiste
concept in Spanish: Concepto
concept in Esperanto: Koncepto
concept in French: Concept
concept in Ido: Koncepto
concept in Icelandic: Hugtak
concept in Italian: Concetto
concept in Lithuanian: Sąvoka
concept in Macedonian: Концепт
concept in Dutch: Concept (filosofie)
concept in Japanese: 概念
concept in Polish: Pojęcie
concept in Portuguese: Conceito
concept in Kölsch: Bejreff
concept in Romanian: Concept
concept in Russian: Понятие
concept in Albanian: Koncepti
concept in Simple English: Concept
concept in Serbian: Концепт
concept in Finnish: Käsite
concept in Swedish: Begrepp
concept in Vietnamese: Khái niệm
concept in Turkish: Kavram
concept in Yiddish: באגריף
concept in Chinese: 概念
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Vorstellung, apprehension, assumption, attitude, climate of opinion,
common belief, community sentiment, conceit, conception, conceptualization,
conclusion, consensus
gentium, consideration, eidetic
image, envisaging,
envisioning,
estimate, estimation, ethos, eye, fancy, feeling, general belief,
idea, image, imagery, imagery study, imaging, imagism, imagistic poetry,
imago, impression, intellection, intellectual
object, judgment,
lifelike image, lights,
memory-trace, mental image, mental impression, mental picture,
mental representation, mind, mystique, notion, objectification,
observation,
opinion, perception, personal
judgment, picture,
picturing, poetic
imagery, point of view, popular belief, position, posture, presumption, prevailing
belief, public belief, public opinion, reaction, recept, reflection, representation, sentiment, sight, stance, supposition, theory, thinking, thought, view, vision, visual image, visualization, way of
thinking, word-painting