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Part front matter for Part V Compare and Contrast
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Published:March 2018
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There are a plethora of alternative approaches to conceptual engineering. Many of these are embedded in different theories about language, concepts, semantics, pragmatics, and communication. In these remaining chapters I (too) briefly discuss some of these. In many cases, the overall theoretical frameworks are so different that comparison is hard, but I have tried to isolate various features that both illuminate aspects of my own theory and make at least partial comparison possible.
Here is the plan: I first discuss Ludlow, and Plunkett and Sundell, and Barker on micro-languages and metalinguistic negotiation (Chapter 15). I then consider Haslanger and others who think an appeal to the ‘function’ or ‘purpose’ or ‘point’ of concepts should play an important role when thinking about conceptual engineering (Chapter 16). Chapter 17 discusses the relation between Chalmers’s subscript gambit and the Austerity Framework. Chapter 18 picks up some themes from Chalmers and Eklund on the limits of revision, revisiting some of the themes from Part III.
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