| name | conceptual-analysis |
| description | Master conceptual analysis methodology - defining concepts through necessary and sufficient conditions. Use for: analyzing concepts, testing definitions, finding counterexamples. Triggers: 'what is X', 'define', 'definition', 'necessary conditions', 'sufficient conditions', 'counterexample', 'conceptual analysis', 'analysis', 'concept', 'essence', 'iff', 'if and only if'. |
Conceptual Analysis Skill
Master the method of analyzing concepts by seeking necessary and sufficient conditions, testing against counterexamples, and refining definitions.
Overview
What Is Conceptual Analysis?
The method of clarifying concepts by:
- Proposing conditions for concept application
- Testing against cases (real and imagined)
- Refining based on counterexamples
- Reaching reflective equilibrium
The Goal
Explicit Definition: X is F iff conditions C₁, C₂, C₃...
- Each condition necessary
- Jointly sufficient
- Captures the concept's extension and intension
The Method
Step-by-Step Protocol
CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS PROTOCOL
════════════════════════════
1. TARGET IDENTIFICATION
└── What concept are we analyzing?
└── Clarify the question ("What is knowledge?")
2. INITIAL ANALYSIS
└── Propose conditions
└── Draw on clear cases
└── State: X is F iff C₁, C₂, C₃...
3. COUNTEREXAMPLE TESTING
└── Try to imagine cases that:
├── Satisfy conditions but aren't F
└── Are F but don't satisfy conditions
4. REVISION
└── Modify conditions to handle counterexamples
└── Add, remove, or revise conditions
5. ITERATION
└── Repeat steps 3-4 until stable
6. REFLECTIVE EQUILIBRIUM
└── Balance analysis against intuitions
└── May revise intuitions OR analysis
Types of Counterexamples
| Type | Description | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Too narrow | Excludes cases that ARE F | Weaken conditions |
| Too broad | Includes cases that AREN'T F | Strengthen conditions |
| Edge case | Genuinely borderline | Accept vagueness or precisify |
Classic Examples
Knowledge (JTB Analysis)
ANALYSIS OF KNOWLEDGE
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INITIAL ANALYSIS:
S knows that P iff:
1. S believes that P
2. P is true
3. S is justified in believing P
GETTIER COUNTEREXAMPLE:
Smith believes "The man who will get the job has 10 coins"
├── Justified (saw Jones counting coins)
├── True (Smith gets job, happens to have 10 coins)
├── But doesn't KNOW (true by luck)
└── Therefore: JTB is too broad
REVISIONS:
├── No false lemmas
├── Sensitivity: Would not believe if false
├── Safety: Could not easily be wrong
├── Virtue: True belief from intellectual virtue
└── Knowledge-first: Abandon analysis
Free Will (Classical Analysis)
ANALYSIS OF FREE ACTION
═══════════════════════
SIMPLE ANALYSIS:
S acts freely iff S could have done otherwise
COUNTEREXAMPLE (Frankfurt):
├── Jones decides to vote for Biden
├── Unknown to Jones, a neuroscientist would intervene
│ if Jones was about to vote Trump
├── But Jones votes Biden on his own
├── Jones couldn't have done otherwise
├── Yet Jones seems to act freely
└── Therefore: PAP (Principle of Alternative Possibilities) fails
REVISIONS:
├── Focus on actual sequence
├── Reasons-responsiveness
├── Source theories (originates in agent)
Art (Definition Attempt)
ANALYSIS OF ART
═══════════════
ATTEMPT 1: Representation
├── Art represents reality
├── Counterexample: Abstract art, pure music
└── Too narrow
ATTEMPT 2: Expression
├── Art expresses emotion
├── Counterexample: Some art is cold, intellectual
└── Too narrow
ATTEMPT 3: Significant Form (Bell)
├── Art has significant form
├── Problem: Circular—what makes form "significant"?
└── Uninformative
ATTEMPT 4: Institutional (Dickie)
├── Art = artifact + conferred artworld status
├── Problem: What's the artworld? Circular?
└── Contested
LESSON: Some concepts may resist analysis
Techniques
Case Method
Generate cases to test the analysis:
- Clear positive cases: Obviously F
- Clear negative cases: Obviously not F
- Borderline cases: Test boundaries
- Thought experiments: Imaginative cases
Necessary vs. Sufficient Conditions
NECESSARY CONDITIONS
════════════════════
Required for F-ness but may not be enough
"Being unmarried is necessary for being a bachelor"
├── All bachelors are unmarried
├── But not all unmarried people are bachelors
└── Unmarried is necessary, not sufficient
SUFFICIENT CONDITIONS
═════════════════════
Enough for F-ness but may not be required
"Being a square is sufficient for being a rectangle"
├── All squares are rectangles
├── But not all rectangles are squares
└── Square is sufficient, not necessary
BICONDITIONAL
═════════════
Both necessary and sufficient
"X is a bachelor iff X is an unmarried adult male"
├── All and only bachelors satisfy this
└── Captures the concept
Ockham's Razor for Analyses
- Prefer simpler analyses
- Don't multiply conditions unnecessarily
- But don't oversimplify
Challenges to Conceptual Analysis
Family Resemblance (Wittgenstein)
- Some concepts lack common essence
- "Game" — no single defining feature
- Network of overlapping similarities
Open Texture
- Concepts have unforeseen applications
- Cannot anticipate all cases
- Definitions are provisional
Experimental Philosophy
- Intuitions vary across cultures, demographics
- Are armchair intuitions reliable?
- Need empirical investigation
Naturalized Epistemology (Quine)
- No sharp analytic/synthetic distinction
- Conceptual truths are just very central beliefs
- Philosophy continuous with science
Best Practices
Do
- Start with clear cases
- Explain why conditions are chosen
- Consider multiple counterexamples
- Be prepared to revise
- Acknowledge borderline cases
Don't
- Assume first analysis is right
- Ignore stubborn counterexamples
- Add ad hoc conditions to save analysis
- Claim certainty about contested concepts
- Forget that intuitions can be wrong
Output Format
## Conceptual Analysis: [CONCEPT]
### Initial Analysis
X is [CONCEPT] iff:
1. Condition 1
2. Condition 2
3. Condition 3
### Testing
**Clear positive case**: [Example satisfying conditions and being F]
**Clear negative case**: [Example not satisfying conditions, not being F]
### Counterexamples Found
1. [Counterexample 1] — Analysis is too [narrow/broad]
2. [Counterexample 2] — Analysis is too [narrow/broad]
### Revised Analysis
X is [CONCEPT] iff:
1. Revised condition 1
2. Revised condition 2
3. New condition 3
### Assessment
[How confident are we in this analysis?]
[Remaining difficulties?]
Integration with Repository
Related Skills
argument-mapping: Analyzing argument structurelogic: Testing logical relations
For Thought Development
Use conceptual analysis to clarify key terms in your philosophical explorations.