Summary
Einstein once said that “thinking without the positing of categories and of concepts in general would be as impossible as is breathing in a vacuum.” His remark echoes a long tradition of Western philosophy arguing that our experience and knowledge are structured by a framework of categories or general concepts. The categorical framework contains our most basic and general presuppositions about the intelligible world and our status in it. It is not imposed externally but is already embodied in our objective thoughts as oxygen is integrated in the blood of breathing organisms. Since the categories subtly influence our thinking, it is as important to examine them as to test whether the air we breathe is polluted. Philosophers from Aristotle to Kant have made major efforts to abstract them from our actual thoughts, articulate, and criticize them.
This book continues my effort to uncover the categorical framework of objective thought as it is embedded in scientific theories and common sense. Scientific theories contain some of our most refined thoughts. They do not merely represent the objective world: They represent it in ways intelligible to us. Thus while their objective contents illuminate the world, their conceptual frameworks also illustrate the general structure of theoretical reason, an important aspect of our mind.
As a physicist who turns to philosophize, I naturally started by examining relativity and quantum mechanics. Many general concepts, including the familiar notions of object and experience, space–time and causality, seem problematic when physics pushes beyond the form of human observation and analyzes matter to its simplest constitutive level.
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- Foundations of Complex-system TheoriesIn Economics, Evolutionary Biology, and Statistical Physics, pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998