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박승배

Park, Seungbae
Philosophy of Science Lab.
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In Defense of Realism and Selectivism from Lyons's Objections

Author(s)
Park, Seungbae
Issued Date
2019-12
DOI
10.1007/s10699-019-09614-7
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/30434
Fulltext
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10699-019-09614-7
Citation
FOUNDATIONS OF SCIENCE, v.24, no.4, pp.605 - 615
Abstract
Lyons (2016, 2017, 2018) formulates Laudan’s (1981) historical objection to scientific realism as a modus tollens. I present a better formulation of Laudan’s objection, and then argue that Lyons’s formulation is supererogatory. Lyons rejects scientific realism (Putnam, 1975) on the grounds that some successful past theories were (completely) false. I reply that scientific realism is not the categorical hypothesis that all successful scientific theories are (approximately) true, but rather the statistical hypothesis that most successful scientific theories are (approximately) true. Lyons rejects selectivism (Kitcher, 1993; Psillos, 1999) on the grounds that some working assumptions were (completely) false in the history of science. I reply that selectivists would say not that all working assumptions are (approximately) true, but rather that most working assumptions are (approximately) true.
Publisher
SPRINGER
ISSN
1233-1821
Keyword (Author)
Counterexample formulationModus tollens formulationNo-miracles argumentScientific realismSelectivism
Keyword
SCIENTIFIC REALISMPESSIMISTIC INDUCTION

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