This book tackles the question of the symbolic structure of physics, a topic which is implicit in any theory of knowledge, but one that often seems to be ignored as an explicit and central element in today's epistemological debates. The elucidation of this problem should benefit a number of ongoing discussions and can help to avoid much recurring confusion. The contributions to the book have been chosen so as to provide a coherent view, ultimately addressing the relation between the concepts used in science and the real world. The first part provides an introduction to the problem as it arises in physics, and to the modern history of symbols. The subject of the second part is the epistemological discussion taking place between physicists and philosophers about the role of symbols in our knowledge of Nature. The third part addresses key issues related to the methodology of physics and the character of its symbolic structures. The aim of this book is to provide a consistent, if not comprehensive, view, emphasizing aspects that are paradigmatic for the natural sciences as a whole.
Author(s): Massimo Ferrari (auth.), Professor Massimo Ferrari, Professor Ion-Olimpiu Stamatescu (eds.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 230
Tags: Physics, general
Front Matter....Pages I-XV
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Sources for the History of the Concept of Symbol from Leibniz to Cassirer....Pages 3-32
On the Use and Character of Symbols in Modern Physical Theories....Pages 33-72
Front Matter....Pages 73-73
The Symbol in the Theory of Science: Duhem’s Alleged Instrumentalism or Conventionalism and the Continuity of Scientific Development....Pages 75-96
Beyond Realism. Symbolism in the Philosophy of Science by Charles S. Peirce and Ernst Cassirer....Pages 97-108
Heinrich Hertz and the Concept of a Symbol....Pages 109-121
Front Matter....Pages 123-123
Shifting Symbolic Structures and Changing Theories: On the Non-Translatability and Empirical Comparability of Incommensurable Theories....Pages 125-148
Symbol and Intuition in Modern Physics....Pages 149-175
Idealizations in Physics....Pages 177-192
Symbolizing States and Events in Quantum Mechanics....Pages 193-209
The Semiotics of “Postmodern” Physics....Pages 211-229
Back Matter....Pages 230-230