A Novel Defense of Scientific Realism

A Novel Defense of Scientific Realism

by Jarrett Leplin
A Novel Defense of Scientific Realism

A Novel Defense of Scientific Realism

by Jarrett Leplin

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Overview

Vigorous and controversial, this book develops a sustained argument for a realist interpretation of science, based on a new analysis of the concept of predictive novelty. Identifying a form of success achieved in science--the successful prediction of novel empirical results--which can be explained only by attributing some measure of truth to the theories that yield it, Jarrett Leplin demonstrates the incapacity of nonrealist accounts to accommodate novel success and constructs a deft realist explanation of novelty. To test the applicability of novel success as a standard of warrant for theories, Leplin examines current directions in theoretical physics, fashioning a powerful critique of currently developing standards of evaluation. Arguing that explanatory uniqueness warrants inference, and exposing flaws in contending philosophical positions that sever explanatory power from epistemic justification, Leplin holds that abductive, or explanatory, inference is as fundamental as enumerative or eliminative inference, and contends that neither induction nor abduction can proceed without the other on pain of generating paradoxes. Leplin's conception of novelty has two basic components: an independence condition, ensuring that a result novel for a theory have no essential role, even indirectly, in the theory's provenance; and a uniqueness condition, ensuring that no competing theory provides a basis for predicting the same result. Showing that alternative approaches to novelty fall short in both respects, Leplin proceeds to a series of test cases, engaging prominent scientific theories from nineteenth-century accounts of light to modern cosmology in an effort to demonstrate the epistemological superiority of his view. Ambitious and tightly argued, A Novel Defense of Scientific Realism advances new positions on major topics in philosophy of science and offers a version of realism as original as it is compelling, making it essential reading for philosophers of science, epistemologists, and scholars in science studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195354379
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/07/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Lexile: 1380L (what's this?)
File size: 364 KB

About the Author

University of North Carolina, Greensboro

Table of Contents

Introductionxi
1Truth and the Success of Science3
Explaining Scientific Success3
Simplistic Accounts of Success6
Dismissive Attitudes toward Explanation9
Underdetermination12
The Alleged Superfluousness of Truth in Explanation15
Excising Truth from Explanation21
Surrogates for Truth28
The Metaphysical Import of Truth29
2Conceptions of Novelty34
The History of the Independence Requirement34
Temporal Constraints40
Bayesian Confirmation44
Contemporary Analyses of Independence49
Constraints on the Analysis of Novelty63
3An Analysis of Novelty64
Overview and Motivation64
Assumptions and Terminology65
Conditions for Novelty77
4Applications83
Fresnel's Theory of Diffraction83
Special Relativity86
The Expansion of the Universe93
The Big Bang94
5Realism and Novelty98
The Burden of Argument98
Minimal Epistemic Realism102
The Explanatory Poverty of Instrumentalism104
In Defense of Abduction116
Novel Prediction versus Retroactive Explanation120
Partial Truth and Success127
The Pragmatics of Partial Truth131
6Counterarguments136
Overview136
The Skeptical Historical Induction141
Empirical Equivalence and Underdetermination152
Is There Truth in Virtue?164
NOA's Bark Is as Terse as It's Trite173
7The Future of Realism178
Limits to Testability in Fundamental Physics178
Methodological Practice182
Warranting Methodological Change186
A Measured Retreat188
Bibliography191
Index195
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