In
medical dictionaries,
guidelines and other
consensus statements and
classifications, definitions should as far as possible be: • simple and easy to understand, • 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 would be a circular definition, a
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. • 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. For example, it appears difficult to define blindness in positive terms rather than as "the absence of sight in a creature that is normally sighted".
Fallacies of definition 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 rely upon
primitive notions. If every term of every
definiens must itself be defined, "where at last 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 (called the ten
generalissima) cannot be defined, since a higher genus cannot be assigned under which they may fall. Thus
being, unity and similar concepts cannot be defined. 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 to avoid misunderstanding. Locke and
Mill also argued that
individuals cannot be defined. Names are learned 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==