English
Noun
definitions
- Plural of definition
A definition is a statement of the
meaning
of a word or phrase. The term to be defined is known as the
definiendum (Latin: that which is to be defined). The words which
define it are known as the definiens (Latin: that which is doing
the defining).
Stipulative definitions
There are two types of definitions:
A descriptive definition provides to a term a
meaning which is in general use.
A stipulative definition of a term carries a
meaning which a speaker wants it to convey for the purpose of his
or her discourse. Thus, the term may be new, or a stipulative
definition may prescribe a new meaning to a term which is already
in use.
A descriptive definition can be shown to be
"right" or "wrong" by comparison to usage, but a stipulative
definition cannot.
A
precising
definition extends the descriptive dictionary definition
(lexical definition) of a term for a specific purpose by including
additional criteria that narrow down the set of things meeting the
definition.
C.L.
Stevenson has identified
persuasive
definition as a form of stipulative definition which purports
to describe the "true" or "commonly accepted" meaning of a term,
while in reality stipulating an altered use, perhaps as an argument
for some specific view.
Stevenson has also noted that some definitions
are "legal" or "coercive", whose object is to create or alter
rights, duties or crimes.
Intension and extension
An
intensional
definition, also called a connotative definition, specifies the
necessary and sufficient conditions for a thing being a member
of a specific
set. Any
definition that attempts to set out the essence of something, such
as that by
genus
and differentia, is an intensional definition.
An
extensional
definition, also called a denotative definition, of a concept
or term specifies its
extension.
It is, a list naming every
object
that is a member of a specific
set.
So, for example, an intensional definition of
'
Prime
Minister' might be the most senior minister of a cabinet in the
executive branch of government in a parliamentary system (; whereas
an extensional definition would be simply a
list of all past, present and future
prime
ministers.
One important form of the extensional definition
is
ostensive
definition. This gives the meaning of a term by pointing, in
the case of an individual, to the thing itself, or in the case of a
class, to examples of the right kind. So you can explain who Alice
(an individual) is by pointing her out to me; or what a rabbit (a
class) is by pointing at several and expecting me to 'catch on'.
This is the manner in which all children initially learn the names
of things. The process of ostensive definition itself was
critically appraised by
Ludwig
Wittgenstein.
An enumerative definition of a concept or term is
an
extensional
definition that gives an explicit and exhaustive listing of all
the
objects
that fall under the concept or term in question. Enumerative
definitions are only possible for finite sets and only practical
for relatively small sets.
Definition by genus and differentia
Traditionally, a
definition consists of the genus (the family) of thing to which the
defined thing belongs, and the differentia (the distinguishing
feature which marks it off from other members of the same family).
Thus 'triangle' is defined as 'a plane figure (genus) bounded by
three straight sides (differentia).
Rules for definition by genus and differentia
Certain rules
have traditionally been given for this particular type of
definition.
- A definition must set out the essential attributes of the thing
defined.
- Definitions should avoid circularity. To define a horse as 'a
member of the species equus would convey no information whatsoever.
For this reason, Locke adds that a definition of a term must not
consist of terms which are synonymous with it. This error is known
as circulus in definiendo. Note, however, that it is acceptable to
define two relative terms in respect of each other. Clearly, we
cannot define 'antecedent' without using the term 'consequent', nor
conversely.
- The definition must not be too wide or too narrow. It must be
applicable to everything to which the defined term applies (i.e.
not miss anything out), and to nothing else (i.e. not include any
things to which the defined term would not truly apply).
- The definition must not be obscure. The purpose of a definition
is to explain the meaning of a term which may be obscure or
difficult, by the use of terms that are commonly understood and
whose meaning is clear. The violation of this rule is known by the
Latin term obscurum per obscurius. However, sometimes scientific
and philosophical terms are difficult to define without obscurity.
(See the definition of Free will in
Wikipedia, for instance).
- A definition should not be negative where it can be positive.
We should not define 'wisdom' as the absence of folly, or a healthy
thing as whatever is not sick. Sometimes this is unavoidable,
however. We cannot define a point except as 'something with no
parts', nor blindness except as 'the absence of sight in a creature
that is normally sighted'.
Essence
In classical thought, a definition was taken to
be a statement of the essence of a thing.
Aristotle had it
that an object's essential attributes form its "essential nature",
and that a definition of the object must include these essential
attributes.
The idea that a definition should state the
essence of a thing led to the distinction between nominal and real
essence, originating with Aristotle. In a passage from the
Posterior
Analytics, he says that we can know the meaning of a made-up
name (he gives the example 'goat stag'), without knowing what he
calls the 'essential nature' of the thing that the name would
denote, if there were such a thing. This led medieval logicians to
distinguish between the so-called quid nominis or 'whatness of the
name', and the underlying nature common to all the things it names,
which they called the quid rei or 'whatness of the thing'. (Early
modern philosophers like Locke used the corresponding English terms
'nominal essence' and 'real essence'). The name 'hobbit', for
example, is perfectly meaningful. It has a quid nominis. But we
could not know the real nature of hobbits, even if there were such
things, and so we cannot know the real nature or quid rei of
hobbits. By contrast, the name 'man' denotes real things (men) that
have a certain quid rei. The meaning of a name is distinct from the
nature that thing must have in order that the name apply to
it.
This leads to a corresponding distinction between
nominal and real definition. A nominal definition is the definition
explaining what a word means, i.e. which says what the 'nominal
essence' is, and is definition in the classical sense as given
above. A real definition, by contrast, is one expressing the real
nature or quid rei of the thing.
This preoccupation with essence dissipated in
much of modern philosophy.
Analytic
philosophy in particular is critical of attempts to elucidate
the essence of a thing.
Russell
described it as "a hopelessly muddle-headed notion".
More recently
Kripke's
formalisation of
possible
world semantics in
Modal logic
led to a new approach to
essentialism. Insofar as
the essential properties of a thing are necessary to it, they are
those things it possesses in all possible worlds. Kripke refers to
names used in this way as
Rigid
designators.
Genetic definition
A genetic definition describes the
process or method by which a thing is formed. "But if you define
the circle as a pattern resulting from having a segment of a line
revolve around one of its ends, this is a genetic definition
because it tells you how to make a circle."
Recursive definitions
A
recursive
definition, sometimes also called an inductive definition, is
one that defines a word in terms of itself, so to speak, albeit in
a useful way. Normally this consists of three steps:
- At least one thing is stated to be a member of the set being
defined; this is sometimes called a "base set".
- All things bearing a certain relation to other members of the
set are also to count as members of the set. It is this step that
makes the definition recursive.
- All other things are excluded from the set
For instance, we could define
natural
number as follows (after
Peano):
- "0" is a natural number.
- Each natural number has a distinct successor, such that:
- the successor of a natural number is also a natural number, and
- no natural number is succeeded by "0".
- Nothing else is a natural number.
So "0" will have exactly
one successor, which for convenience we can call "1". In turn, "1"
will have exactly one successor, which we would call "2", and so
on. Notice that the second condition in the definition itself
refers to natural numbers, and hence involves
self-reference.
Although this sort of definition involves a form of
circularity,
it is not vicious, and the definition is quite successful.
Limitations of definition
Given that a
natural
language such as
English
contains, at any given time, a finite number of words, any
comprehensive list of definitions must either be circular or leave
some terms undefined. If every term of every definiens must itself
be defined, where should we stop? A dictionary, for instance,
insofar as it is a comprehensive list of
lexical
definitions, must resort to
circularity.
Many philosophers have chosen instead to leave
some terms undefined. The
scholastic
philosophers claimed that the highest genera (the so-called ten
generalissima) cannot be defined, since we cannot assign any higher
genus under which they may fall. Thus we cannot define
being, unity and similar concepts.
Locke
supposes in
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding that the names of
simple concepts do not admit of any definition. More recently
Bertrand
Russell sought to develop a formal language based on
logical
atoms. Other philosophers, notably
Wittgenstein,
rejected the need for any undefined simples. Wittgenstein pointed
out in his
Philosophical
Investigations that what counts as a "simple" in one
circumstance might not do so in another. He rejected the very idea
that every explanation of the meaning of a term needed itself to be
explained: "As though an explanation hung in the air unless
supported by another one", claiming instead that explanation of a
term is only needed when we need to avoid misunderstanding.
Locke and
Mill
also argued that we cannot define
individuals.
We learn names by connecting an idea with a sound, so that speaker
and hearer have the same idea when the same word is used. This is
not possible when no one else is acquainted with the particular
thing that has "fallen under our notice". Russell offered his
theory
of descriptions in part as a way of defining a proper name, the
definition being given by a
definite
description that "picks out" exactly one individual.
Saul Kripke
pointed to difficulties with this approach, especially in relation
to
modality, in
his book Naming and Necessity.
There is a presumption in the classic example of
a definition that the definiens can be stated. Wittgenstein argued
that for some terms this is not the case. The examples he used
include game, number and family. In such cases, he argued, there is
no fixed boundary that can be used to provide a definition. Rather,
the items are grouped together because of a
family
resemblance. For terms such as these it is not possible and
indeed not necessary to state a definition; rather, one simply
comes to understand the use of the term.
See also
External links
References
Notes
definitions in Bosnian: Definicija
definitions in Catalan: Definició
definitions in Czech: Definice
definitions in Danish: Definition
definitions in German: Definition
definitions in Estonian: Definitsioon
definitions in Spanish: Definición
definitions in Esperanto: Difino
definitions in Persian: تعریف
definitions in French: Définition
definitions in Galician: Definición
definitions in Croatian: Definicija
definitions in Indonesian: Definisi
definitions in Italian: Definizione
definitions in Hebrew: הגדרה
definitions in Hungarian: Definíció
definitions in Macedonian: Дефиниција
definitions in Malay (macrolanguage):
Definisi
definitions in Dutch: Definitie
definitions in Japanese: 定義
definitions in Norwegian: Definisjon
definitions in Polish: Definicja
definitions in Portuguese: Definição
definitions in Romanian: Definiţie
definitions in Quechua: Sut'ichay
definitions in Simple English: Definition
definitions in Slovenian: Definicija
definitions in Serbian: Дефиниција
definitions in Serbo-Croatian: Definicija
definitions in Finnish: Määritelmä
definitions in Swedish: Definition
definitions in Tagalog: Katuturan
definitions in Telugu: నిర్వచనము
definitions in Vietnamese: Định nghĩa
definitions in Ukrainian: Означення
definitions in Võro: Ärqseletüs
definitions in Yiddish: דעפיניציע
definitions in Chinese: 定义