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Concept Audits

A Philosophical Method

Nicholas Rescher

Concept auditing is based on an innovative premise for philosophers: when they address an everyday life conception on the order of knowledge, truth, justice, fairness, beauty, or the like and purport to be dealing with what it involves, then they must honor the existing meanings of these terms. And insofar as the prevailing meaning is being contravened, they must explain how and justify why this is being done. They must, in sum, explain how their treatment of a topic relates to our established pre-systematic understanding of the issues involved and relate their deliberations to the prevailing conception of the matter they are proposing to discuss. The aim of a concept audit is to consider to what extent a given philosophical discussion honors this communicative obligation.

Concept Audits sets out not only to explain and defend this procedure, but also to consider a host of applications and exemplifications of these ideas. Nicholas Rescher shows how this method of conceptual auditing can function to elucidate and evaluate philosophical theses and doctrine across a wide spectrum of issues, ranging from logic to ethics and metaphysics. Accordingly, he explains and illustrates an instructive innovation in philosophical method. This new study of philosophical methodology presents its method in a clear and convincing way and shows the method at work with respect to a wide spectrum of important philosophical issues.
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  • Reviews
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Lexington Books
Pages: 194 • Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-4039-1 • Hardback • August 2016 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-4041-4 • Paperback • September 2018 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-1-4985-4040-7 • eBook • August 2016 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Subjects: Philosophy / Language, Philosophy / General
Nicholas Rescher is professor of philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh.
PREFACE

I.METHODOLOGY

1.Introduction: The Concept Auditing Process

II.SOME HISTORICAL APPLICATIONS

2. The Socratic Method as an Illustration

3.Neo-Platonic Wholes

4.Descartes and Generalization

5.Spinoza on Things and Ideas

6.Kantian Absolutism in Moral Theory

7.Mill on Desirability

8.Ordinary Language Philosophy on the Nature of Knowing

9.Russell-Gettier on the Analysis of Knowledge

10.Concept Dialectics in Historical Perspective

11.Metaphysical Illusions

III.FURTHER ILLUSTRATIVE APPLICATIONS

12.Who Dun It?

13.Existence: To Be or Not to Be

14.Explanatory Regression

15.The Fallacy of Respect Neglect

16.Appearance and Reality

17.On the Truth about Reality

18.Sameness and Change

19.Origination Issues

20.Shaping Ideas

21.Construing Necessitation

22.Conceptual Horizons

23.Language Limits

24.On Certainty

25.Timeless Truth

26.Assessing Acceptability

27.Value Neutrality in Science

28.Personhood and Obligation

29.Control Issues

30.Fairness Problems

31.The Ethics of Delegation

32.Doing unto Others

33.Faux Quantities

34.Luck vs. Fortune

35.The Problem of Progress

36.Issues of Excellence

37.Problems of Perfection

IV.CONCLUSION

38.Concluding Observations
In Concept Audits, Rescher (Univ. of Pittsburgh) turns his attention to ordinary language, advocating for a simple method for ensuring that philosophical concepts such as “truth,” “knowledge,” and “beauty” hew to their pre-philosophical meanings. Echoing Ludwig Wittgenstein, Rescher makes the case that when philosophy moves away from ordinary language, philosophy suffers, not merely in its ability to solve conceptual problems but also in its ability to resonate with non-philosophers. Rescher’s method—to examine the ordinary-language terms used in philosophical deliberation—takes just ten pages to elaborate; in the 36 brief chapters that follow, he demonstrates concept auditing in practice. Rescher subjects classic problems, among them the Cartesian demon and the ship of Theseus, to conceptual audit, turning up all manner of equivocations, category mistakes, and logical fallacies... [H]e is a titan of the field, and Concept Audits offers a methodologically sound glimpse into contemporary ordinary language philosophy in action. Summing Up:Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews


[T]here are things to be gained by reading his book.
— Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews


As one of the world's strongest philosophers, Nicholas Rescher has written books on topics going far beyond analysis of Ordinary Language. In Concept Audits, however, his theme is how disastrous it is to forget what words ordinarily mean, using a host of intriguing examples.
— John Leslie, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada


Nicholas Rescher’s admirable Concept Audits: A Philosophical Method systematizes a three-step natural language strategy for auditing the pretheoretical meanings of concept terms vital to philosophical expression. Rescher reveals the method successfully applied in many chapters in the history of philosophy, starting with Socrates’ elenchus as a prototype concept audit. He then considers the method’s value thematically in approaching a wide range of contemporary philosophical inquiries. Rescher’s book is highly recommended to students and professionals. It will be appreciated as much for what it teaches about the underlying assumptions of some of the past most productive practice of philosophy, as for its clearly articulated and lavishly illustrated program for charting future methodologically self-conscious philosophical advances.
— Dale Jacquette, Universität Bern


Nicholas Rescher successively shows that Ordinary Language Philosophy is viable today by applying its methodology to a wide variety of philosophical issues within logic and metaphysics and areas in between. I highly recommend the book for anyone who recognizes the important role language plays in philosophical methodology.
— Mark Roberts, Franciscan University of Steubenville


Concept Audits

A Philosophical Method

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Concept auditing is based on an innovative premise for philosophers: when they address an everyday life conception on the order of knowledge, truth, justice, fairness, beauty, or the like and purport to be dealing with what it involves, then they must honor the existing meanings of these terms. And insofar as the prevailing meaning is being contravened, they must explain how and justify why this is being done. They must, in sum, explain how their treatment of a topic relates to our established pre-systematic understanding of the issues involved and relate their deliberations to the prevailing conception of the matter they are proposing to discuss. The aim of a concept audit is to consider to what extent a given philosophical discussion honors this communicative obligation.

    Concept Audits sets out not only to explain and defend this procedure, but also to consider a host of applications and exemplifications of these ideas. Nicholas Rescher shows how this method of conceptual auditing can function to elucidate and evaluate philosophical theses and doctrine across a wide spectrum of issues, ranging from logic to ethics and metaphysics. Accordingly, he explains and illustrates an instructive innovation in philosophical method. This new study of philosophical methodology presents its method in a clear and convincing way and shows the method at work with respect to a wide spectrum of important philosophical issues.
Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 194 • Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
    978-1-4985-4039-1 • Hardback • August 2016 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
    978-1-4985-4041-4 • Paperback • September 2018 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
    978-1-4985-4040-7 • eBook • August 2016 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
    Subjects: Philosophy / Language, Philosophy / General
Author
Author
  • Nicholas Rescher is professor of philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • PREFACE

    I.METHODOLOGY

    1.Introduction: The Concept Auditing Process

    II.SOME HISTORICAL APPLICATIONS

    2. The Socratic Method as an Illustration

    3.Neo-Platonic Wholes

    4.Descartes and Generalization

    5.Spinoza on Things and Ideas

    6.Kantian Absolutism in Moral Theory

    7.Mill on Desirability

    8.Ordinary Language Philosophy on the Nature of Knowing

    9.Russell-Gettier on the Analysis of Knowledge

    10.Concept Dialectics in Historical Perspective

    11.Metaphysical Illusions

    III.FURTHER ILLUSTRATIVE APPLICATIONS

    12.Who Dun It?

    13.Existence: To Be or Not to Be

    14.Explanatory Regression

    15.The Fallacy of Respect Neglect

    16.Appearance and Reality

    17.On the Truth about Reality

    18.Sameness and Change

    19.Origination Issues

    20.Shaping Ideas

    21.Construing Necessitation

    22.Conceptual Horizons

    23.Language Limits

    24.On Certainty

    25.Timeless Truth

    26.Assessing Acceptability

    27.Value Neutrality in Science

    28.Personhood and Obligation

    29.Control Issues

    30.Fairness Problems

    31.The Ethics of Delegation

    32.Doing unto Others

    33.Faux Quantities

    34.Luck vs. Fortune

    35.The Problem of Progress

    36.Issues of Excellence

    37.Problems of Perfection

    IV.CONCLUSION

    38.Concluding Observations
Reviews
Reviews
  • In Concept Audits, Rescher (Univ. of Pittsburgh) turns his attention to ordinary language, advocating for a simple method for ensuring that philosophical concepts such as “truth,” “knowledge,” and “beauty” hew to their pre-philosophical meanings. Echoing Ludwig Wittgenstein, Rescher makes the case that when philosophy moves away from ordinary language, philosophy suffers, not merely in its ability to solve conceptual problems but also in its ability to resonate with non-philosophers. Rescher’s method—to examine the ordinary-language terms used in philosophical deliberation—takes just ten pages to elaborate; in the 36 brief chapters that follow, he demonstrates concept auditing in practice. Rescher subjects classic problems, among them the Cartesian demon and the ship of Theseus, to conceptual audit, turning up all manner of equivocations, category mistakes, and logical fallacies... [H]e is a titan of the field, and Concept Audits offers a methodologically sound glimpse into contemporary ordinary language philosophy in action. Summing Up:Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
    — Choice Reviews


    [T]here are things to be gained by reading his book.
    — Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews


    As one of the world's strongest philosophers, Nicholas Rescher has written books on topics going far beyond analysis of Ordinary Language. In Concept Audits, however, his theme is how disastrous it is to forget what words ordinarily mean, using a host of intriguing examples.
    — John Leslie, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada


    Nicholas Rescher’s admirable Concept Audits: A Philosophical Method systematizes a three-step natural language strategy for auditing the pretheoretical meanings of concept terms vital to philosophical expression. Rescher reveals the method successfully applied in many chapters in the history of philosophy, starting with Socrates’ elenchus as a prototype concept audit. He then considers the method’s value thematically in approaching a wide range of contemporary philosophical inquiries. Rescher’s book is highly recommended to students and professionals. It will be appreciated as much for what it teaches about the underlying assumptions of some of the past most productive practice of philosophy, as for its clearly articulated and lavishly illustrated program for charting future methodologically self-conscious philosophical advances.
    — Dale Jacquette, Universität Bern


    Nicholas Rescher successively shows that Ordinary Language Philosophy is viable today by applying its methodology to a wide variety of philosophical issues within logic and metaphysics and areas in between. I highly recommend the book for anyone who recognizes the important role language plays in philosophical methodology.
    — Mark Roberts, Franciscan University of Steubenville


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