The browser you are using is not supported by this website. All versions of Internet Explorer are no longer supported, either by us or Microsoft (read more here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/windows/end-of-ie-support).

Please use a modern browser to fully experience our website, such as the newest versions of Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari etc.

The case for protoconcepts : Why concepts, language, and protolanguage all need protoconcepts

Author

  • Joel Parthemore

Summary, in English

Fodor is infamous for his radical conceptual nativism, McDowell likewise well-known for suggesting that concepts extend “all the way out” into the world and arguing against what he calls (per Sellars) The Myth of the Given: the idea that non-conceptual percepts justify conceptual frameworks. One need not go so far as either researcher, however, in allowing merit to their arguments. It seems we are predisposed, from the beginning of our lives, to look at the world in certain ways and not others. The world need not be “fully conceptual” to be never entirely free, for the conceptually minded agent, of conceptual taint. It seems structured remarkably like our concepts are structured because our concepts present it that way, and our concepts present it that way because of predispositions that are substantively innate. The Protoconcept Hypothesis holds that such protoconcepts are onto- and phylogenetically prior to concepts, themselves onto- and phylogenetically prior to (proto-)language. If that is right, then an account of language genesis and evolution requires a corresponding account for concepts and an explication of protolanguage assumes an explication of protoconcepts.

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Pages

159-178

Publication/Series

Theoria et Historia Scientiarum

Volume

11

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika

Topic

  • Languages and Literature

Keywords

  • evolution
  • productivity
  • systematicity
  • Kantian spontaneity
  • Myth of the Given
  • innateness
  • protoconcepts
  • concepts

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0867-4159