ExplorerArtificial IntelligenceAI
Research PaperResearchia:202605.06069

The Counterexample Game: Iterated Conceptual Analysis and Repair in Language Models

Daniel Drucker

Abstract

Conceptual analysis -- proposing definitions and refining them through counterexamples -- is central to philosophical methodology. We study whether language models can perform this task through iterated analysis and repair chains: one model instance generates counterexamples to a proposed definition, another repairs the definition, and the process repeats. Across 20 concepts and thousands of counterexample-repair cycles, we find that, although many LM-generated counterexamples are judged invalid...

Submitted: May 6, 2026Subjects: AI; Artificial Intelligence

Description / Details

Conceptual analysis -- proposing definitions and refining them through counterexamples -- is central to philosophical methodology. We study whether language models can perform this task through iterated analysis and repair chains: one model instance generates counterexamples to a proposed definition, another repairs the definition, and the process repeats. Across 20 concepts and thousands of counterexample-repair cycles, we find that, although many LM-generated counterexamples are judged invalid by both expert humans and an LM judge, the LM judge accepts roughly twice as many as humans do. Nonetheless, per-item validity judgments are moderately consistent across humans and between humans and the LM. We further find that extended iteration produces increasingly verbose definitions without improving accuracy. We also see that some concepts resist stable definitions in general. These findings suggest that while LMs can engage in philosophical reasoning, the counterexample-repair loop hits diminishing returns quickly and could be a fruitful test case for evaluating whether LMs can sustain high-level iterated philosophical reasoning.


Source: arXiv:2605.03936v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.03936v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.03936v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.03936v1

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Access Paper
View Source PDF
Submission Info
Date:
May 6, 2026
Topic:
Artificial Intelligence
Area:
AI
Comments:
0
Bookmark