Tuesday, 25 October 2005
No-Miracles, Pessimistic Inductions, and Structural Realism
John Worrall, London School of Economics
12:05 pm, 817R Cathedral of Learning
Abstract: I earlier (1989) presented Structural Realism
as a position that reconciles the two seemingly most powerful, but
oppositely directed, considerations relevant to the issue of scientific
realism – basically the astounding success of (some)
scientific theories, on the one hand, and the existence of (apparently
radical) theory-change in science, on the other. These considerations
are often dressed up as the ‘No Miracles Argument’ (NMA)
and the ‘Pessimistic Induction” (PI), respectively.
However, it has recently been argued (Howson 2000) that the NMA
is nothing more than an elementary probabilistic fallacy. While,
ironically enough, Lewis has argued (2001) that exactly the same
fallacy underlies the PI. Callender and Magnus (2004) have urged
that since this shows that “the major considerations for and
against realism come to naught”, the whole scientific realism
debate (at any rate in what they call the “wholesale”
sense) should be 3/6/08 but “ennui”. This paper investigates whether there is
anything in these recent arguments that should concern the structural
realist or force her to lapse into a state of terminal ennui. I
argue that the apparent difficulties raised in the literature are
no more than artifacts of the (misguided) way in which the considerations
underlying ‘the’ no miracles argument and ‘the’
pessimistic meta-induction have been formalized. This will in turn
enable me to clarify some important aspects of Structural Realism,
which neither friends nor foes of the position have uniformly taken
on board.
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