Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Copyright acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Continuous symmetries
- Part II Discrete symmetries
- 11 Classic texts: extracts from Leibniz, Kant, and Black
- 12 Understanding permutation symmetry
- 13 Quarticles and the identity of indiscernibles
- 14 Handedness, parity violation, and the reality of space
- 15 Mirror symmetry: what is it for a relational space to be orientable?
- 16 Physics and Leibniz's principles
- Part III Symmetry breaking
- Part IV General interpretative issues
- Index
16 - Physics and Leibniz's principles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Copyright acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Continuous symmetries
- Part II Discrete symmetries
- 11 Classic texts: extracts from Leibniz, Kant, and Black
- 12 Understanding permutation symmetry
- 13 Quarticles and the identity of indiscernibles
- 14 Handedness, parity violation, and the reality of space
- 15 Mirror symmetry: what is it for a relational space to be orientable?
- 16 Physics and Leibniz's principles
- Part III Symmetry breaking
- Part IV General interpretative issues
- Index
Summary
Leibniz's principles made for an elegant and coherent philosophy. In part meta-physical, in part methodological, they addressed fundamental questions – in the treatment of symmetry, in the relationship of physics to mathematics, in logic – that are if anything even more pressing today than they were in Leibniz's time. As I shall read them, they also expressed a distinctive and uncompromising form of realism, a commitment to the adequacy of purely descriptive concepts. This doctrine has been called ‘semantic universalism’ by van Fraassen (1991), and the ‘generalist picture’ by O'Leary-Hawthorne and Cover (1996): it will become clearer in due course just what it entails.
The principles that I shall consider are the Principle of Sufficient Reason (PSR) and the Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles (PII). In the first instance I shall take them both to be methodological principles. The former I shall read as requiring that the concepts of physics be entirely transparent. Analysis and explanation are to proceed without any limits. The perspective is impersonal: any epistemological limitation, to do with our human situation or perceptual apparatus, is to be viewed as a purely practical matter, reflecting no fundamental constraint. This puts in place a part of the generalist picture.
The PSR clearly promotes the use of mathematical concepts in physics. The PII, in contrast, depends on a sharp distinction between purely mathematical concepts, and physical ones.
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- Information
- Symmetries in PhysicsPhilosophical Reflections, pp. 289 - 308Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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