Not to suggest that you’ve done this, but I think it’s a fairly common mistake to look for conceptual engineering’s merits as a metaphilosophy by only looking at papers that include the words ‘conceptual engineering’, many of which are quite bad. There’s a section of Fixing Language (by Cappelen) that provides examples of actual philosophical contributions, some of which predate the term.
Not to suggest that you’ve done this, but I think it’s a fairly common mistake to look for conceptual engineering’s merits as a metaphilosophy by only looking at papers that include the words ‘conceptual engineering’, many of which are quite bad. There’s a section of Fixing Language (by Cappelen) that provides examples of actual philosophical contributions, some of which predate the term.
Two papers that I think are important—and count as conceptual engineering, by my lights—are The Extended Mind and Grace and Alienation.
The second paper looks interesting.
(Having read through it, it’s actually really, really good).