Laimann, Jessica (2017) Capricious kinds. [Preprint]
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Abstract
According to Ian Hacking, some human kinds are subject to a peculiar type of classificatory instability: individuals change in reaction to being classified, which in turn leads to a revision of our understanding of the kind. Hacking’s claim that these ‘human interactive kinds’ cannot be natural kinds has been vehemently criticised on the grounds that similar patterns of instability occur in paradigmatic examples of natural kinds. I argue that the dialectic of the extant debate misses the core conceptual problem of human interactive kinds. The problem is not that these kinds are particularly unstable but ‘capricious’—their members behave in wayward, unexpected manners which defeats existing theoretical understanding. The reason for that, I argue, is that human interactive kinds are often ‘hybrid kinds’ consisting of a base kind and an associated status, which makes mechanisms that support patterns of change and stability systematically difficult to understand and predict.
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Item Type: | Preprint | ||||||
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Additional Information: | Accepted for publication in The British Journal for Philosophy of Science | ||||||
Keywords: | interactive kinds, human kinds, looping effects, natural kinds, social kinds | ||||||
Subjects: | Specific Sciences > Biology Specific Sciences > Psychology Specific Sciences > Sociology |
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Depositing User: | Jessica Laimann | ||||||
Date Deposited: | 20 Nov 2017 16:12 | ||||||
Last Modified: | 20 Nov 2017 16:12 | ||||||
Item ID: | 14129 | ||||||
Subjects: | Specific Sciences > Biology Specific Sciences > Psychology Specific Sciences > Sociology |
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Date: | 18 November 2017 | ||||||
URI: | https://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/id/eprint/14129 |
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