Idealization and the Aims of Science

Author(s)

This book explores the centrality of idealization to science and reconsiders the aims of science in light of it. Idealizations are assumptions made without regard for whether they are true--that a plane is frictionless, for example, or that humans are perfectly rational agents. Idealizations of all kinds pervade science and are often made with full knowledge that they are false. Moreover, it is uncommon for scientists to try to replace them with more accurate assumptions. Why do scientists deliberately maintain idealizations in their theories and models? What do they contribute to science? Angela Potochnik shows how a science practiced by human beings in a complex world results in rampant and unchecked idealization and argues that the full scope of the use of idealizations has significant implications for our best theories of what science shows us about the world, and of scientific explanations specifically. Her clear analysis will be welcomed by anyone curious about the nature of science.

Name in long format: Idealization and the Aims of Science
ISBN-10: 022650705X
ISBN-13: 9780226507057
Book pages: 288
Book language: en
Edition: Illustrated
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Dimensions: Height: 0.9 Inches, Length: 9.1 Inches, Weight: 1.212542441 Pounds, Width: 6.2 Inches

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