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Empirical Success or Explanatory Success: What Does Current Scientific Realism Need to Explain?
37
Citations
1
References
2005
Year
Instrumental ReliabilityTheoretical ArgumentSocial SciencesReproducible ResearchEmpirical SuccessMere Empirical AdequacyHistory Of SciencePlausible ReasoningBest ExplanationMethodological DevelopmentCognitive ScienceTheory BuildingMethodological ArticleSpeculative PhilosophyHumanitiesPerformance StudiesNatural SciencesEpistemologyExplanatory SuccessPhilosophical InquiryArts
Against the well-known objection that in the history of science there are many theories that are successful but false, Psillos offers a three-pronged defense of scientific realism as the best explanation for the success of science. Focusing on these, I criticize Psillos’ defense, arguing that each prong is weakened when we recognize that according to realist rebuttals of the underdetermination argument and versions of empiricism, realists are committed to accounting for the explanatory success of theories, not their mere empirical adequacy or instrumental reliability. I conclude by indicating how ‘explanationist’ realism might be recast to accommodate my arguments.
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