1st Edition

The Nature of Scientific Theory

Edited By Lawrence Sklar Copyright 2000
388 Pages
by Routledge

388 Pages
by Routledge

About the Series Contemporary philosophy of science combines a general study from a philosophical perspective of the methods of science, with an inquiry, again from the philosophical point of view, into foundational issues that arise in the various special sciences. Methodological philosophy of science has deep connections with issues at the center of pure philosophy. It makes use of important... Read more
A: Observation and Theory; 1: The Ontological Status of Theoretical Entities; 2: Observation; B: Theoretical Structure; 3: Empiricist Criteria Of Cognitive Significance: Problems and Changes; 4: Two Dogmas of Empiricism; 5: The Theoretician's Dilemma A Study in the Logic of Theory Construction; 6: What is a Scientific Theory?; 7: The Semantic Approach to Scientific Theories; C: Realism and Anti-Realism, Underdetermination; 8: To Save The Phenomena *; 9: How to Define Theoretical Terms; 10: Saving the Noumena *; 11: The Natural Ontological Attitude; 12: The Reality of Causes in a World of Instrumental Laws; 13: The Conventionalist Thesis and its First Critics; 14: The Framework of Philosophical Perplexity; 15: Realism and Reason; 16: On Empirically Equivalent Systems of the World

Biography

Lawrence Sklar