Abstract

The question of what makes a concept coherent (what makes its members form a comprehensible class) has received a variety of answers. In this article we review accounts based on similarity, feature correlations, and various theories of categorization. We find that each theory provides an inadequate account of conceptual coherence (or no account at all) because none provides enough constraints on possible concepts. We propose that concepts are coherent to the extent that they fit people's background knowledge or naive theories about the world. These theories help to relate the concepts in a domain and to structure the attributes that are internal to a concept. Evidence of the influence of theories on various conceptual tasks is presented, and the possible importance of theories in cognitive development is discussed.

Keywords

Coherence (philosophical gambling strategy)PsychologyCognitive psychologyCognitive scienceMathematicsStatistics

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Publication Info

Year
1985
Type
article
Volume
92
Issue
3
Pages
289-316
Citations
2665
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Gregory L. Murphy, Douglas L. Medin (1985). The role of theories in conceptual coherence.. Psychological Review , 92 (3) , 289-316. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-295x.92.3.289

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037/0033-295x.92.3.289