Scientific Progress: A Study Concerning the Nature of the Relation Between Successive Scientific Theories

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For the philosopher interested in the idea of objective knowledge of the real world, the nature of science is of special importance, for science, and more particularly physics, is today considered to be paradigmatic in its affording of such knowledge. And no understand­ ing of science is complete until it includes an appreciation of the nature of the relation between successive scientific theories-that is, until it includes a conception of scientific progress. Now it might be suggested by some that there are a variety of ways in which science progresses, or that there are a number of different notions of scientific progress, not all of which concern the relation between successive scientific theories. For example, it may be thought that science progresses through the application of scientific method to areas where it has not previously been applied, or, through the development of individual theories. However, it is here suggested that the application of the methods of science to new areas does not concern forward progress so much as lateral expansion, and that the provision of a conception of how individual theories develop would lack the generality expected of an account concerning the progress of science itself.

Author(s): Craig Dilworth (auth.)
Series: Synthese Library 153
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Year: 1981

Language: English
Pages: 164
Tags: Philosophy of Science

Front Matter....Pages 1-9
Introduction....Pages 11-13
The Deductive Model....Pages 14-17
The Basis of the Logical Empiricist Conception of Science....Pages 18-21
The Basis of the Popperian Conception of Science....Pages 22-29
The Logical Empiricist Conception of Scientific Progress....Pages 30-36
The Popperian Conception of Scientific Progress....Pages 37-51
Popper, Lakatos, and the Transcendence of the Deductive Model....Pages 52-59
Kuhn, Feyerabend, and Incommensurability....Pages 60-65
The Gestalt Model....Pages 66-76
The Perspectivist Conception of Science....Pages 77-99
Development of the Perspectivist Conception in the Context of the Kinetic Theory of Gases....Pages 100-117
The Set-Theoretic Conception of Science....Pages 118-132
Application of the Perspectivist Conception of the Views of Newton Kepler and Galileo....Pages 133-141
Back Matter....Pages 142-164