I argue that a concept is applied correctly when it is applied to the kind of things it is the concept of. Correctness as successful kind-tracking is fulfilling an externally and naturalistically individuated standard. And the normative aspect of concept-application so characterized depends on the relational (non-individualistic) feature of conceptual content. I defend this view against two objections. The first is that norms should provide justifications for action, and the second involves a version of the thesis of indeterminacy of reference.
CITATION STYLE
Lalumera, E. (2005). A simple realist account of the normativity of concepts. Disputatio, (19), 205–221. https://doi.org/10.2478/disp-2005-0008
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