Title: Realism
1Realism Anti-Realism
- Dr Emma Tobin
- Philosophy
- Bristol
2- Should we believe in what science tells us
exists? - Do quarks/viruses/DNA (e.g. unobservable
entities) exist? - Scientific Realism - Yes
- Instrumentalism - Yes, but only to a degree.
- Scientific Anti-Realism - No
3The Views
4Scientific Realism
- (1) The observable and unobservable entities
described by the theory exist objectively and
mind-independently. (Metaphysical) - (2) It is ra8itional to believe what scientific
theories say about observable and unobservables
entities. Our current scientific theories are
approximately true. (Epistemological) - (3)A theory is true in positing entities, if the
entities talked about by the theory exist and the
theory corresponds to facts about the world.
(e.g. a Correspondence Theory of Truth)
(Semantic)
5- (1) Electrons exist (metaphysical thesis)
- (2) We should believe that the entities
(electrons) posited by electron theory exist.
(epistemological thesis). Electron theory is
approximately true. - (3) Statements about electrons are true/false
because they correspond to electrons in the
world. (semantic thesis)
6The No Miracles Argument
- The modern positivist has to leave it without
explanation (the realist charges) that electron
calculi and space-time calculi and DNA
calculi correctly predict observable phenomena
if, in reality, there are no electrons, no curved
space-time and no DNA molecules. If those
objects dont exist at all, then it is a miracle
that a theory which speaks of curved-space time
successfully predicts phenomena. (Putnam (1978)
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7Inference to the Best Explanation
- We ought rationally to infer that the best
explanation of what we observe is true. - (e.g.) if Electron Theory is the best explanation
of what we observe, then we should infer that
electron theory is true.
8Scientific Anti-Realism
- Anti-realists only have to deny one of the
commitments of scientific realism. - Deny (1) that the entities exist or that they
exist mind-independently. - Deny (2) that we can know that our current
scientific theories are approximately true. - Deny (3) that there is a correspondence between
the statements in our theories and facts about
the world.
9Scientific Anti-Realism
- The Anti-Realist needs an argument
- (1) The Pessimistic Meta-Induction
- (2) Underdetermination
- (3) The Quine - Duhem Thesis
10(1) The Pessimistic Meta-Induction
- Meta-Induction about scientific theories.
-
- Entities and theories that once were thought to
be true turned out to be false in the history
of science. - (e.g. phlogiston theory/electromagnetic ether)
- Conclusion All our present theories will turn
out to be false. -
- No good reason for thinking our present theories
are true (or approximately true.)
11(2) The Underdetermination Argument
- Some current Theory T is known and all the
evidence is consistent with T - There is an alternative Theory T which is also
consistent with the evidence. (Empirically
equivalent) - If all the evidence for T is also consistent with
T, then there is no reason to believe T to be
true rather than T.
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13Ptolemys Geocentrism
Ptolemy amends the geocentric picture to
include epicycles so as to account for observed
Retrograde motion.
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15- Ptolemys geocentrism and Copernican
Heliocentrism were for a while empirically
equivalent. - Both consistent with the observed evidence.
- Both views entailed the planets and the moon
would - appear in the same region of the sky.
- Both could account for retrograde motion.
- Nothing observed could lead us to accept one
theory as more true than the other. - The evidence underdetermines the theory.
- Yet taken literally these theories entail
entirely inconsistent worldviews.
16Weak Strong Underdetermination
- Weak Underdetermination - because observations
and experimental data are consistent with more
than one theory we should suspend judgement about
which theory is true. - Strong Underdetermination - For any theory, there
will always be another theory that is consistent
with the evidence. Theory choice is radically
underdetermined.
17Reply Observable vs. Unobservable
- The empirical equivalence of theories requires
that the observations of a theory are clearly
distinguished. - But, there is no clear-cut distinction between
observables and unobservables. - And, the observable/unobservable distinction
might change over time with our theories. Laudan
Leplin (1991) - Therefore, empirically equivalent theories may be
distinguished in the future (e.g. new
instruments). - There is no reason to believe that there will
always exist strongly empirically equivalent
theories.
18- All theories are underdetermined by empirical
data (holism). - The totality of our so-called knowledge or
beliefs, from the most casual matters of
geography or history to the profoundest laws of
atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and
logic, is a man-made fabric which impinges upon
experience only along the edges. (Quine Two
Dogmas of Empiricism 39)
19Reply Empirical Equivalence vs. Evidential
Equivalence
- When two theories are empirically equivalent,
there are further factors which may count so that
they are not evidentially equivalent. - Simplicity/ Elegance
- Strength
- Explanatory/Predictive Power
- Accuracy
20(3) The Duhem -Quine Problem - The
Impossibility of Crucial Experiments
- It is impossible to test a scientific hypothesis
in isolation, because an empirical test of the
hypothesis requires one or more background
auxillary hypotheses.(e.g. testing a theory
involves values for physical constants). - Any seemingly disconfirming observational
evidence can always be accommodated to any
theory, depending on the auxilliary hypotheses. - The realist can only choose between theories in a
purely pragmatic fashion.
21The finitude of Scientific Testing
- Physics vs. Metaphysics.
- Physics the classification of experimental
results. - Metaphysics the nature of reality.
- A theory in physics can never be regarded as
absolutely definitive, because we belief in it
based only on a finite series of experiments. - Open empirical possibility that a different
theory will still explain the same results.
22- Duhem believed that only in the field of physics
can a single individual hypothesis not be
isolated for testing. - Quine -- All theories are underdetermined by
empirical data (holism). - The totality of our so-called knowledge or
beliefs, from the most casual matters of
geography or history to the profoundest laws of
atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and
logic, is a man-made fabric which impinges upon
experience only along the edges. (Quine Two
Dogmas of Empiricism 39)
23- Although the arguments against realism are
strong, is extreme scientific anti-realism
warranted? - Is there a path between realism and anti-realism?
- (1) Instrumentalism
- (2) Constructive Empiricism
24Phenomena vs. Noumena
- Noumena - Things in Themselves
- Phenomena - Things as we perceive them
(appearances, or objects of the senses.)
25Instrumentalism (Laudan)
- A theory with greater explanatory scope than any
other may be instrumentally useful. This success
does not, for historical reasons, license belief.
- Scientific theories are not literal descriptions
of reality, but they are useful instruments. - Nevertheless, science can be said to be
cumulative, because it uses the theoretical
instruments of science to solve empirical
puzzles. - Laudan (1977) the problem-solving ability of a
theory is the number and importance of solved
empirical problems minus the number and
importance of the anomalies.
26Constructive Empiricism (Van Fraassen)
- Scientific theories should be taken literally,
but this does not require belief in the entities
postulated by the theories. - An empirically adequate scientific theory saves
the phenomena. It correctly describes what is
observable (does not have to be observed). - Scientific theories can only achieve empirical
adequacy.
27The Views