Timothy D Lyons
Contemporary Scientific Realism
The Challenge from the History of Science
Herausgeber: Vickers, Peter
Timothy D Lyons
Contemporary Scientific Realism
The Challenge from the History of Science
Herausgeber: Vickers, Peter
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Contemporary Scientific Realism brings together the most important lessons from the history of science to explain scientific realism. The expert contributors introduce and assess topics that redefine what we know about the philosophy of science.
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Contemporary Scientific Realism brings together the most important lessons from the history of science to explain scientific realism. The expert contributors introduce and assess topics that redefine what we know about the philosophy of science.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 163mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780190946814
- ISBN-10: 0190946814
- Artikelnr.: 60748225
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 163mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780190946814
- ISBN-10: 0190946814
- Artikelnr.: 60748225
Timothy D. Lyons is Chair of Philosophy and Professor of Philosophy of Science at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. He has numerous publications on the scientific realism debate in, for instance, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Science, Synthese, and The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Science. He is the author of Scientific Realism: Elements in the Philosophy of Science (Cambridge University Press, 2021). Peter Vickers is Associate Professor and Reader in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Durham in the United Kingdom. He is the author of Understanding Inconsistent Science (Oxford University Press, 2013) and the Associate Editor of the journal Studies in History and Philosophy of Science. He has several publications on the scientific realism debate in, for instance, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Science, Synthese, and The European Journal for Philosophy of Science.
* Chapter 1. Introduction, Timothy D. Lyons and Peter Vickers
* Part I: Historical Cases for the Debate
* Chapter 2. Theoretical Continuity, Approximate Truth, and the
Pessimistic Meta-Induction: Revisiting the Miasma Theory, Dana
Tulodziecki
* Chapter 3. What Can the Discovery of Boron Tell Us About the
Scientific Realism Debate?, Jonathon Hricko
* Chapter 4. No Miracle After All: The Thomson Brothers' Novel
Prediction that Pressure Lowers the Freezing Point of Water, Keith
Hutchison
* Chapter 5. From the Evidence of History to the History of Evidence:
Descartes, Newton, and Beyond, Stathis Psillos
* Chapter 6. How Was Nicholson's Proto-Element Theory Able to Yield
Explanatory as well as Predictive Success?, Eric R. Scerri
* Chapter 7. Selective Scientific Realism and Truth-Transfer in
Theories of Molecular Structure, Amanda J. Nichols and Myron A.
Penner
* Chapter 8. Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular
Spectroscopy, Teru Miyake and George E. Smith
* Part II: Contemporary Scientific Realism
* Chapter 9. The Historical Challenge to Realism and Essential
Deployment, Mario Alai
* Chapter 10. Realism, Instrumentalism, Particularism: A Middle Path
Forward in the Scientific Realism Debate, Kyle Stanford
* Chapter 11. Structure not Selection, James Ladyman
* Chapter 12. The Case of the Consumption Function: Structural Realism
in Macroeconomics, Jennifer Jhun
* Chapter 13. We Think, They Thought: A Critique of the Pessimistic
Meta-Meta Induction, Ludwig Fahrbach
* Chapter 14. The Paradox of Infinite Limits: A Realist Response,
Patricia Palacios and Giovanni Valente
* Chapter 15. Realist Representations of Particles: The Standard Model,
Top Down, and Bottom Up, Anjan Chakravartty
* Index
* Part I: Historical Cases for the Debate
* Chapter 2. Theoretical Continuity, Approximate Truth, and the
Pessimistic Meta-Induction: Revisiting the Miasma Theory, Dana
Tulodziecki
* Chapter 3. What Can the Discovery of Boron Tell Us About the
Scientific Realism Debate?, Jonathon Hricko
* Chapter 4. No Miracle After All: The Thomson Brothers' Novel
Prediction that Pressure Lowers the Freezing Point of Water, Keith
Hutchison
* Chapter 5. From the Evidence of History to the History of Evidence:
Descartes, Newton, and Beyond, Stathis Psillos
* Chapter 6. How Was Nicholson's Proto-Element Theory Able to Yield
Explanatory as well as Predictive Success?, Eric R. Scerri
* Chapter 7. Selective Scientific Realism and Truth-Transfer in
Theories of Molecular Structure, Amanda J. Nichols and Myron A.
Penner
* Chapter 8. Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular
Spectroscopy, Teru Miyake and George E. Smith
* Part II: Contemporary Scientific Realism
* Chapter 9. The Historical Challenge to Realism and Essential
Deployment, Mario Alai
* Chapter 10. Realism, Instrumentalism, Particularism: A Middle Path
Forward in the Scientific Realism Debate, Kyle Stanford
* Chapter 11. Structure not Selection, James Ladyman
* Chapter 12. The Case of the Consumption Function: Structural Realism
in Macroeconomics, Jennifer Jhun
* Chapter 13. We Think, They Thought: A Critique of the Pessimistic
Meta-Meta Induction, Ludwig Fahrbach
* Chapter 14. The Paradox of Infinite Limits: A Realist Response,
Patricia Palacios and Giovanni Valente
* Chapter 15. Realist Representations of Particles: The Standard Model,
Top Down, and Bottom Up, Anjan Chakravartty
* Index
* Chapter 1. Introduction, Timothy D. Lyons and Peter Vickers
* Part I: Historical Cases for the Debate
* Chapter 2. Theoretical Continuity, Approximate Truth, and the
Pessimistic Meta-Induction: Revisiting the Miasma Theory, Dana
Tulodziecki
* Chapter 3. What Can the Discovery of Boron Tell Us About the
Scientific Realism Debate?, Jonathon Hricko
* Chapter 4. No Miracle After All: The Thomson Brothers' Novel
Prediction that Pressure Lowers the Freezing Point of Water, Keith
Hutchison
* Chapter 5. From the Evidence of History to the History of Evidence:
Descartes, Newton, and Beyond, Stathis Psillos
* Chapter 6. How Was Nicholson's Proto-Element Theory Able to Yield
Explanatory as well as Predictive Success?, Eric R. Scerri
* Chapter 7. Selective Scientific Realism and Truth-Transfer in
Theories of Molecular Structure, Amanda J. Nichols and Myron A.
Penner
* Chapter 8. Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular
Spectroscopy, Teru Miyake and George E. Smith
* Part II: Contemporary Scientific Realism
* Chapter 9. The Historical Challenge to Realism and Essential
Deployment, Mario Alai
* Chapter 10. Realism, Instrumentalism, Particularism: A Middle Path
Forward in the Scientific Realism Debate, Kyle Stanford
* Chapter 11. Structure not Selection, James Ladyman
* Chapter 12. The Case of the Consumption Function: Structural Realism
in Macroeconomics, Jennifer Jhun
* Chapter 13. We Think, They Thought: A Critique of the Pessimistic
Meta-Meta Induction, Ludwig Fahrbach
* Chapter 14. The Paradox of Infinite Limits: A Realist Response,
Patricia Palacios and Giovanni Valente
* Chapter 15. Realist Representations of Particles: The Standard Model,
Top Down, and Bottom Up, Anjan Chakravartty
* Index
* Part I: Historical Cases for the Debate
* Chapter 2. Theoretical Continuity, Approximate Truth, and the
Pessimistic Meta-Induction: Revisiting the Miasma Theory, Dana
Tulodziecki
* Chapter 3. What Can the Discovery of Boron Tell Us About the
Scientific Realism Debate?, Jonathon Hricko
* Chapter 4. No Miracle After All: The Thomson Brothers' Novel
Prediction that Pressure Lowers the Freezing Point of Water, Keith
Hutchison
* Chapter 5. From the Evidence of History to the History of Evidence:
Descartes, Newton, and Beyond, Stathis Psillos
* Chapter 6. How Was Nicholson's Proto-Element Theory Able to Yield
Explanatory as well as Predictive Success?, Eric R. Scerri
* Chapter 7. Selective Scientific Realism and Truth-Transfer in
Theories of Molecular Structure, Amanda J. Nichols and Myron A.
Penner
* Chapter 8. Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular
Spectroscopy, Teru Miyake and George E. Smith
* Part II: Contemporary Scientific Realism
* Chapter 9. The Historical Challenge to Realism and Essential
Deployment, Mario Alai
* Chapter 10. Realism, Instrumentalism, Particularism: A Middle Path
Forward in the Scientific Realism Debate, Kyle Stanford
* Chapter 11. Structure not Selection, James Ladyman
* Chapter 12. The Case of the Consumption Function: Structural Realism
in Macroeconomics, Jennifer Jhun
* Chapter 13. We Think, They Thought: A Critique of the Pessimistic
Meta-Meta Induction, Ludwig Fahrbach
* Chapter 14. The Paradox of Infinite Limits: A Realist Response,
Patricia Palacios and Giovanni Valente
* Chapter 15. Realist Representations of Particles: The Standard Model,
Top Down, and Bottom Up, Anjan Chakravartty
* Index