Conceptual Scheme
A conceptual scheme is a framework of categories, concepts, and principles through which a group of agents organizes experience and represents the world to themselves. The idea is central to much of twentieth-century anthropology, linguistics, and philosophy — most notably in the claim that different cultures or languages possess different conceptual schemes, and that these schemes are partially or wholly incommensurable: they cannot be fully translated into one another because they carve up reality in fundamentally different ways.
Donald Davidson's famous 1974 essay 'On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme' argued that the notion is incoherent. If two languages were truly incommensurable, no translation between them would be possible; but if no translation is possible, there is no evidence that they are languages at all. The condition of interpretability — the very possibility of recognizing another system as language-like — presupposes enough shared rationality and shared world that the incommensurability claim collapses. Davidson's argument does not deny cultural diversity; it denies that diversity is best described as a difference of conceptual worlds.
The debate has direct implications for artificial intelligence and cross-agent communication. If two AI systems trained on different data distributions develop different internal representations, do they possess different conceptual schemes? And if so, is cross-system translation possible, or are we left with the incommensurability problem in silicon form?