Conceptual analysis is currently out of favour, especially in North America. This is partly through misunderstanding of its nature. Properly understood, conceptual analysis is not a mysterious activity discredited by Quine that seeks after the a priori in some hard‐to‐understand sense. It is, rather, something familiar to everyone, philosophers and non‐philosophers alike—or so I argue. Another reason for its unpopularity is a failure to appreciate the need for conceptual analysis. The cost of repudiating it has not been sufficiently appreciated; without it, we cannot address a whole raft of im ... More
Keywords: analysis, analytic philosophy, conceptual analysis, Frank Jackson, location problem, metaphilosophy, physicalism, Quine
| Print publication date: 2000 | Print ISBN-13: 9780198250616 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 | DOI:10.1093/0198250614.001.0001 |