No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Empirical and Rational Components in Scientific Confirmation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2022
Extract
A common device in popular presentations of science is a sequence of views from cosmic to terrestrial to local to microscopic, thereby placing the subject to which the program is devoted in a proper perspective. I wish to use an adaptation of this device to place the announced topic of our panel — “Do Explanations or Predictions Provide More Evidential Support for Scientific Theories?” — in perspective. My four steps, from the largest to the smallest scale, are the following:
1. A brief summary of the world view suggested by the discoveries of the natural sciences and by philosophical reflections on them;
2. a consideration of the methodology for scientific investigation, upon assumption that this world view is approximately correct;
3. the formulation of a version of Bayesian scientific inference satisfying the desiderata of step 2;
4. the topic of our panel — explanation vs. prediction.
- Type
- Part V. Do Explanations or Predictions (or Neither) Provide More Evidential Support for Scientific Theories?
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1995 by the Philosophy of Science Association
Footnotes
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation, grant no. SBE-9223678.