While analysis is characteristic of the analytic tradition in
philosophy, what is to be analyzed (the
analysandum) often varies. In their papers, philosophers may focus on different areas. One might analyze
linguistic phenomena such as
sentences, or
psychological phenomena such as
sense data. However, arguably the most prominent analyses are written on
concepts or
propositions and are known as
conceptual analysis.
A.C. Ewing distinguished between two forms of philosophical analysis. The first is "what the persons who make a certain statement usually intend to assert" and the second "the qualities, relations and species of continuants mentioned in the statement". As an illustration he takes the statement "I see a tree", this statement could be analysed in terms what the everyday person intends what they say this or it could be analysed metaphysically by asserting
representationalism. Conceptual analysis consists primarily in breaking down or analyzing concepts into their constituent parts in order to gain knowledge or a better understanding of a particular philosophical issue in which the concept is involved. For example, the
problem of free will in philosophy involves various key concepts, including the concepts of
freedom,
moral responsibility,
determinism,
ability, etc. The method of conceptual analysis tends to approach such a problem by breaking down the key concepts pertaining to the problem and seeing how they interact. Thus, in the long-standing debate on whether
free will is compatible with the doctrine of
determinism, several philosophers have proposed analyses of the relevant concepts to argue for either
compatibilism or
incompatibilism. A famous example of conceptual analysis at its best is given by
Bertrand Russell in his
theory of descriptions. Russell attempted to analyze propositions that involved
definite descriptions, which pick out a unique individual (such as "The tallest spy"), and
indefinite descriptions, which pick out a set of individuals (such as "a spy"). In his analysis of definite descriptions, superficially, these descriptions have the standard subject-predicate form of a proposition: thus "The present
king of France is
bald" appears to be predicating "baldness" of the subject, "the present king of France". However, Russell noted that this is problematic, because there is no present king of France (France is
no longer a monarchy). Normally, to decide whether a proposition of the standard subject-predicate form is true or false, one checks whether the subject is in the extension of the predicate. The proposition is then true if and only if the subject is in the extension of the predicate. The problem is that there is no present king of France, so the present king of France cannot be found on the list of bald things or non-bald things. So, it would appear that the proposition expressed by "The present king of France is bald" is neither true nor false. However, analyzing the relevant concepts and propositions, Russell proposed that what definite descriptions really express are not propositions of the subject-predicate form, but rather they express existentially quantified propositions. Thus, "The present king of France" is
analyzed, according to Russell's theory of descriptions, as "There exists an individual who is currently the king of France, there is only one such individual, and that individual is bald." Now one can determine the
truth value of the proposition. Indeed, it is false, because it is not the case that there exists a unique individual who is currently the king of France and is bald, since there is no present king of France. ==Criticism==