30 research outputs found
A precipice below which lies absurdity? Theories without a spacetime and scientific understanding
Funder: Trinity College, University of Cambridge; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000727While the relation between visualization and scientific understanding has
been a topic of long-standing discussion, recent developments in physics have
pushed the boundaries of this debate to new and still unexplored realms. For it
is claimed that, in certain theories of quantum gravity, spacetime
'disappears': and this suggests that one may have sensible physical theories in
which spacetime is completely absent. This makes the philosophical question
whether such theories are intelligible, even more pressing. And if such
theories are intelligible, the question then is how they manage to do so. In
this paper, we adapt the contextual theory of scientific understanding,
developed by one of us, to fit the novel challenges posed by physical theories
without spacetime. We construe understanding as a matter of skill rather than
just knowledge. The appeal is thus to understanding, rather than explanation,
because we will be concerned with the tools that scientists have at their
disposal for understanding these theories. Our central thesis is that such
physical theories can provide scientific understanding, and that such
understanding does not require spacetimes of any sort. Our argument consists of
four consecutive steps: (a) We argue, from the general theory of scientific
understanding, that although visualization is an oft-used tool for
understanding, it is not a necessary condition for it; (b) we criticise certain
metaphysical preconceptions which can stand in the way of recognising how
intelligibility without spacetime can be had; (c) we catalogue tools for
rendering theories without a spacetime intelligible; and (d) we give examples
of cases in which understanding is attained without a spacetime, and explain
what kind of understanding these examples provide
Factive Scientific Understanding Without Accurate Representation
This paper analyzes two ways idealized biological models produce factive scientific
understanding. I then argue that models can provide factive scientific understanding of a
phenomenon without providing an accurate representation of the (difference-making) features of
their real-world target system(s). My analysis of these cases also suggests that the debate over
scientific realism needs to investigate the factive scientific understanding produced by scientistsâ
use of idealized models rather than the accuracy of scientific models themselves
Understanding (in) Newtonâs Argument for Universal Gravitation.
In this essay, I attempt to assess Henk De Regt and Dennis Dieks recent pragmatic and contextual account of scientific understanding on the basis of an important historical case-study: understanding in Newtonâs theory of universal gravitation and Huygensâ reception of universal gravitation. It will be shown that de Regt and Dieksâ CIT-criterion, which stipulates that the appropriate combination of scientistsâ skills and intelligibility-enhancing theoretical virtues is a condition for scientific understanding, is too strong. On the basis of this case-study, it will be shown that scientists can understand each othersâ positions qualitatively and quantitatively, despite their endorsement of different worldviews and despite their convictions as what counts as a proper explanation