Summary |
‘Conceptual Engineering’ is both
the name of a philosophical method and the name of an increasingly popular
field of metaphilosophical research. Although the method of conceptual
engineering has arguably been practiced throughout the history of philosophy,
it has not been until recently that conceptual engineering became the object of
metaphilosophical research. The key idea of conceptual engineering is to take a
normative approach to traditional philosophical questions: Instead of asking
what our current concepts of say, knowledge, race or gender, do mean,
conceptual engineers ask what these concepts should mean. The
underlying assumption is that our actual concepts are not necessarily ideal and
that improving them is an important desideratum of philosophy. The contemporary
metaphilosophical debate about conceptual engineering involves questions
regarding its normative foundations, its actual feasibility, its coherence with
semantic externalism and its proper limits. |