Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2010
INTRODUCTION
When philosophers discuss the topic of explanation, they usually have in mind the following question: Given the beliefs one has and some proposition that one wishes to explain, which subset of the beliefs constitutes an explanation of the target proposition? That is, the philosophical ‘problem of explanation’ typically has bracketed the issue of how one obtains the beliefs; they are taken as given. The problem of explanation has been the problem of understanding the relation ‘x explains y’. Since Hempel (1965) did so much to canonize this way of thinking about explanation, it deserves to be called ‘Hempel's problem’.
The broad heading for the present essay departs from this Hempelian format. I am interested in how we might justify some of the explanatory propositions in our stock of beliefs. Of course, issues of theory confirmation and acceptance are really not so distant from the topic of explanation. After all, it is standard to describe theory evaluation as the procedure of ‘inference to the best explanation’. Hypotheses are accepted, at least partly, in virtue of their ability to explain. If this is right, then the epistemology of explanation is closely related to Hempel's problem.
I should say at the outset that I take the philosopher's term ‘inference to the best explanation’ with a grain of salt.
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