Article published In: Terminology
Vol. 1:2 (1994) ► pp.253–275
On the empirical adequacy of terminological concept theories
The case for prototype theory
Published online: 1 January 1994
https://doi.org/10.1075/term.1.2.03zaw
https://doi.org/10.1075/term.1.2.03zaw
The main purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that classical concept theories and hybrids thereof are empirically inadequate for the terminological analysis and description of concepts in a number of sciences. Examples of the classification and definition of minerals in the field of mineralogy are used to illustrate that the defining features of mineral species are typically the attributes of prototype categories; i.e., they are, amongst others, culturally, perceptually, and bodily based, idealized and essentially interactional and functional in nature. Furthermore, it is argued that classification in mineralogy is founded on an experientialist rather than an objectivist epistemology. These factors strengthen the argument for a prototype approach to concept analysis not only in the humanities and the social sciences but also in the so-called natural and pure sciences.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
赵, 丹丹
Freixa, Judit & Sabela Fernández-Silva
2017. Chapter 7. Terminological variation and the unsaturability of concepts. In Multiple Perspectives on Terminological Variation [Terminology and Lexicography Research and Practice, 18], ► pp. 155 ff.
Sambre, Paul & Cornelia Wermuth
2015. Associative relations and instrumentality in causality. In Handbook of Terminology [Handbook of Terminology, 1], ► pp. 101 ff.
Seppälä, Selja
2015. An ontological framework for modeling the contents of definitions. Terminology. International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Issues in Specialized Communication 21:1 ► pp. 23 ff.
Fernández-Silva, Sabela, Judit Freixa & M. Teresa Cabré Castellví
2014. 9. A method for analysing the dynamics of naming from a monolingual and multilingual perspective. In Dynamics and Terminology [Terminology and Lexicography Research and Practice, 16], ► pp. 183 ff.
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