Mark Wilson presents a series of explorations of our strategies for
understanding the world. 'Physics avoidance' refers to the fact that
we frequently cannot reason about nature in the straightforward manner
we anticipate, but must seek alternative policies that allow us to
address the questions we want answered in a tractable way. Within both
science and everyday life, we find ourselves relying upon thought
processes that reach useful answers in opaque and roundabout manners.
Conceptual innovators are often puzzled by the techniques they
develop, when they stumble across reasoning patterns that are easy to
implement but difficult to justify. But simple techniques frequently
rest upon complex foundations--a young magician learns how to execute
a card-guessing trick without understanding how its progressive steps
squeeze in on a proper answer. As we collectively improve our
inferential skills in this gradually evolving manner, we often wander
into unfamiliar explanatory landscapes in which simple words encode
physical information in complex and unanticipated ways. Like our
juvenile conjurer, we fail to recognize the true strategic rationales
underlying our achievements and may turn instead to preposterous
rationalizations for our policies. We have learned how to reach better
conclusions in a more fruitful way, but we remain baffled by our own
successes. At its best, philosophical reflection illuminates the
natural developmental processes that generate these confusions and
explicates their complexities. But current thinking within philosophy
of science and language works to opposite effect by relying upon
simplistic conceptions of 'cause', 'law of nature', 'possibility', and
'reference' that ignore the strategic complexities in which these
concepts become entangled within real-life usage. To avoid these
distortions, better descriptive tools are wanted. The nine new essays
within this volume illustrate this need for finer discriminations
through a range of revealing cases, of both historical and
contemporary significance.
Les mer
and Other Essays in Conceptual Strategy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192525246
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter