![cover of the book The Material Realization of Science: From Habermas to Experimentation and Referential Realism](/covers/files_200/950000/6e9dd9885c400804861b1e843f3b88d0-d.jpg)
Ebook: The Material Realization of Science: From Habermas to Experimentation and Referential Realism
Author: Hans Radder (auth.)
- Tags: Philosophy, Science general, Physics general
- Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 294
- Year: 2012
- Publisher: Springer Netherlands
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
This book develops a conception of science as a multi-dimensional practice, which includes experimental action and production, conceptual-theoretical interpretation, and formal-mathematical work. On this basis, it addresses the topical issue of scientific realism and expounds a detailed, referentially realist account of the natural sciences. This account is shown to be compatible with the frequent occurrence of conceptual discontinuities in the historical development of the sciences. Referential realism exploits several fruitful ideas of Jürgen Habermas, especially his distinction between objectivity and truth; it builds on a in-depth analysis of scientific experiments, including their material realization; and it is developed through an extensive case study in the history and philosophy of quantum mechanics. The new postscript explains how the book relates to several important issues in recent philosophy of science and science studies.
“I highly recommend this book. Radder is probably the first philosopher of science to make productive epistemological use of the notion of ‘experimental system’. The postscript is most valuable since it connects his work not only to the topical debates in philosophy of science, but also to history of science and science studies.”
Hans-Jörg Rheinberger, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin
About the first edition:
“The debate on realism has recently become rather stale by repetition, but Radder introduces original insights and has written a lively and well-argued contribution to it. The book is to be recommended also as a clear introduction to the complex of relevant issues.”
Mary Hesse, University of Cambridge
“Radder presents an ingenious approach to the issue of scientific realism and conceptual discontinuity. I believe his idea that conceptual discontinuity presupposes other types of continuity is extremely important.”
Mark Rowlands, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Hans Radder is professor of philosophy of science and technology at VU University Amsterdam. He is the author of In and About the World and The World Observed/The World Conceived. He edited The Philosophy of Scientific Experimentation and The Commodification of Academic Research: Science and the Modern University, and is coeditor of Science Transformed? Debating Claims of an Epochal Break.
The book addresses the topical issue of scientific realism and it proposes a detailed account of a referential realism. This account exploits several fruitful ideas of J?rgen Habermas, it builds on an analysis of scientific experimentation, and it is developed through an in-depth case study of the history of quantum mechanics. The Revised edition, with a new postscript situates the book within the recent debates on the issues under discussion.
The book addresses the topical issue of scientific realism and it proposes a detailed account of a referential realism. This account exploits several fruitful ideas of J?rgen Habermas, it builds on an analysis of scientific experimentation, and it is developed through an in-depth case study of the history of quantum mechanics. The Revised edition, with a new postscript situates the book within the recent debates on the issues under discussion.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Habermas’s Philosophy of the Natural Sciences....Pages 3-29
Habermas on Objectivity and Truth: Analysis and Critique....Pages 31-50
Front Matter....Pages 51-51
Experimentation in the Natural Sciences....Pages 53-71
Verifiability and Reference, Relativism and Realism....Pages 73-111
Specification and Application: Two Case Studies from the History and Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics....Pages 113-154
Back Matter....Pages 155-205
The book addresses the topical issue of scientific realism and it proposes a detailed account of a referential realism. This account exploits several fruitful ideas of J?rgen Habermas, it builds on an analysis of scientific experimentation, and it is developed through an in-depth case study of the history of quantum mechanics. The Revised edition, with a new postscript situates the book within the recent debates on the issues under discussion.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Habermas’s Philosophy of the Natural Sciences....Pages 3-29
Habermas on Objectivity and Truth: Analysis and Critique....Pages 31-50
Front Matter....Pages 51-51
Experimentation in the Natural Sciences....Pages 53-71
Verifiability and Reference, Relativism and Realism....Pages 73-111
Specification and Application: Two Case Studies from the History and Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics....Pages 113-154
Back Matter....Pages 155-205
....