Fr. 137.00

Fault-Tracing: Against Quine-Duhem - A Defense of the Objectivity of Scientific Justification

English · Hardback

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It is widely believed in philosophy of science that nobody can claim that any verdict of science is forced upon us by the effects of a physical world upon our sense organs and instruments. The Quine-Duhem problem supposedly allows us to resist any conclusion. Views on language aside, Quine is supposed to have shown this decisively.
But it is just false. In many scientific examples, there is simply no room to doubt that a particular hypothesis is responsible for a refutation or established by the observations.
Fault Tracing shows how to play independently established hypotheses against each other to determine whether an arbitrary hypothesis needs to be altered in the light of (apparently) refuting evidence. It analyses real examples from natural science, as well as simpler cases. It argues that, when scientific theories have a structure that prevents them from using this method, the theory looks wrong, and is subject to serious criticism. This is a new, and potentially far-reaching, theory of empirical justification.

About the author










Sam Mitchell, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA, USA.

Product details

Authors Sam Mitchell
Publisher De Gruyter
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2020
 
EAN 9783110684995
ISBN 978-3-11-068499-5
No. of pages 224
Dimensions 155 mm x 22 mm x 230 mm
Weight 468 g
Illustrations 20 b/w ill., 3 b/w tbl.
Series Epistemische Studien / Epistemic Studies
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > 20th and 21st centuries
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: antiquity to present day

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