Definitions
Definition: A short statement that tells the essential nature of a reference/concept.
- Complex definitions like “government” require a chain of definitions to understand. Weak chains mean poor understanding.
- Acceptable degrees of precision vary for context.
Three Functions of a Definition
- Paradigm/Prototype: Explain exactly what things fit in that concept.
- Clarify Relation: Relate concept to other concepts.
- Aka: ostensive definition (“things like that”)
- Summary Statement: Summarize all current knowledge of referents.
Six Rules of a Good Definition
- Must have a genus and a differentia.
- Tip: If the concept is a noun, the genus will be a noun. If it’s a verb, so will the genus; et cetera.
- Must be coextensive.
- Aka: Must not be too broad or too narrow.
- Must be essential
- aka: Must name characteristics that cause or explain most of the other characteristics.
- Example: “Heart is an organ that goes lub dub” (nonessential) v.s. “Heart is an organ that pumps blood around the body” (essential, and explains the lub dub sound)
- Must not be circular.
- Must not use negative terms unnecessarily.
- Example: “A cat is not a dog”
- Must not use vague, obscure, or metaphorical language.
Four Steps of Constructing Definitions
- List varied referents
- Decide meaning of the word
- Set questionable referent aside for step 4
- Make a diagram with genus at top and concept and other species on the second level
- “What does this compare and contrast to?”, “What are similar things?”
- “What groups all of these things together?”
- Complete chart by listing differentia for each species, underlining important ones.
- Write definition with genus and differentia
- Double-check against the Six Rules of a Good Definition, especially coextensivity.
Tip: Indication of Missing Genus (Not Foolproof): When the definition begins with “when” or “where”.
Concepts, Genus, and Species
Concept: Idea that grasps an open-ended grouping of similar existents.
- “Like a mental file folder”
- Used for the present, past, and future; knowns and unknowns
- Four Parts of a Concept:
- Referents of the concept
- Word: A spoken/written/signed symbol of the concept
- Mental grasp of the word in a story
- Definition: A short statement of the essential nature of the referents.
Genus and Species:
- Genus: Broader category that has various subcategories.
- Differentia: Differentiates subcategories of a genus from each other.
- Can rarely be expressed in a single word
- Species: Narrower categories that make up the genus.
Example of Genus and Differentia: “Humans are rational animals”
- Genus: Animals
- Differentia: Rational
Two Rules of Classifications
- Principle(s) should be consistent and make categories (species) mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive.
- Consistent: Don’t mix inappropriate principles into one definition.
- Mutually Exclusive: Species shouldn’t overlap; a referent should only appear once.
- Jointly Exhaustive: Every referent should be able to fit into a species; nothing should be left out (in this class we fix this by adding an “etc.”)
- Principle(s) should identify essential attributes (differentia).
- For most manmade objects, the essential attribute is function.
Aristotle’s Six Top-Level Categories for Existents
Question: “How do we classify every thing in the world?”
- Answer: Aristotle claims that everything that exists can be categorized into the following six top-level categories:
Aristotle’s Six Top-Level Categories for Existents:
- Things
- Actions
- Relations
- Quantities
- Times
- Places