1st Edition

Models and Theories A Philosophical Inquiry

By Roman Frigg Copyright 2022
    508 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    508 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Models and theories are of central importance in science, and scientists spend substantial amounts of time building, testing, comparing and revising models and theories. It is therefore not surprising that the nature of scientific models and theories has been a widely debated topic within the philosophy of science for many years.

    The product of two decades of research, this book provides an accessible yet critical introduction to the debates about models and theories within analytical philosophy of science since the 1920s. Roman Frigg surveys and discusses key topics and questions, including:

    • What are theories? What are models? And how do models and theories relate to each other?
    • The linguistic view of theories (also known as the syntactic view of theories), covering different articulations of the view, its use of models, the theory-observation divide and the theory-ladenness of observation, and the meaning of theoretical terms.
    • The model-theoretical view of theories (also known as the semantic view of theories), covering its analysis of the model-world relationship, the internal structure of a theory, and the ontology of models.
    • Scientific representation, discussing analogy, idealisation and different accounts of representation.
    • Modelling in scientific practice, examining how models relate to theories and what models are, classifying different kinds of models, and investigating how robustness analysis, perspectivism, and approaches committed to uncertainty-management deal with multi-model situations.

    Models and Theories is the first comprehensive book-length treatment of the topic, making it essential reading for advanced undergraduates, researchers, and professional philosophers working in philosophy of science and philosophy of technology. It will also be of interest to philosophically minded readers working in physics, computer sciences and STEM fields more broadly.

    Preface

    Introduction

    Part 1

    1. Theory and Language

    2. Models in the Received View

    3. Delineating the Observable

    4. Framing the Theoretical

    Part 2

    5. Thinking Through Structures

    6. Representing with Structures

    7. Family Ties

    8. Beyond Structures

    Part 3

    9. Reconsidering Representation

    10. Analogy

    11. Abstraction, Approximation, Idealisation

    12. Limit Idealisations and Factor Exclusions

    Part 4

    13. Challenging Subordination

    14. What Are Models?

    15. Taming Abundance

    16. The Model Muddle

    Envoi.

    Index

    Biography

    Roman Frigg is Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method at the London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. He is the winner of the Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and a permanent visiting professor in the Munich Centre for Mathematical Philosophy of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany. His current work focuses on the nature of scientific models and theories, the foundations of statistical mechanics, and decision making under uncertainty.