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박승배

Park, Seungbae
Philosophy of Science Lab.
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Surrealism Is Not an Alternative to Scientific Realism

Author(s)
Park, Seungbae
Issued Date
2019-12
DOI
10.5840/logos-episteme201910435
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/31137
Fulltext
https://www.pdcnet.org/logos-episteme/content/logos-episteme_2019_0010_0004_0379_0393
Citation
LOGOS & EPISTEME, v.10, no.4, pp.379 - 393
Abstract
Surrealism holds that observables behave as if T were true, whereas scientific realism holds that T is true. Surrealism and scientific realism give different explanations of why T is empirically adequate. According to surrealism, T is empirically adequate because observables behave as if it were true. According to scientific realism, T is empirically adequate because it is true. I argue that the surrealist explanation merely clarifies the concept of empirical adequacy, whereas the realist explanation makes an inductive inference about T. Therefore, the surrealist explanation is a conceptual one, whereas the realist explanation is an empirical one, and the former is not an alternative to the latter.
Publisher
Institute for Economic and Social Research of the Romanian Academy
ISSN
2069-0533
Keyword (Author)
empirical adequacyobservablesscientific realismsurrealismtruth

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