TY - JOUR TI - Political Concepts and the Concept of the Political AU - G. Gunnell, John TI - Political Concepts and the Concept of the Political AB - Although concepts are typically assumed to be at the core of both the language of politics and the language of political inquiry, the meaning of “concept” has remained notoriously vague. In everyday usage, prominent elements of philosophy, and the literature of political science and political theory, concepts are, however, primarily assumed to be mental phenomena that are expressed in words and actions. This assumption has been challenged by Ludwig Wittgenstein, Gilbert Ryle, and a variety of contemporary philosophers who claim that human thought is primarily linguistic. This suggests that concepts are best understood as forms of linguistic usage. The concept-word “politics” refers to a culturally and historically variable category of social phenomena, and it is a mistake to assume that the phrase “the political” designates a theoretical concept. VL - 2017 IS - Nr 1/2017 PY - 2017 SN - 2543-7046 C1 - 2544-0845 SP - 187 EP - 201 DO - 10.4467/00000000TP.17.0010.6589 UR - https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/teoria-polityki/artykul/political-concepts-and-the-concept-of-the-political KW - concept KW - politics KW - mentalism KW - words KW - Wittgenstein