Popper's Explications of Ad hocness: Circularity, Empirical Content, and Scientific Practice


Autoria(s): Bamford, Greg
Data(s)

10/05/1993

Resumo

Popper's explications of 'ad hoc' in relation to hypotheses and explanations turn out to be either trivial, confused or mistaken. One such explication I discuss at length is circularity; another is reduction in empirical content. I argue that non-circularity is preferable to non-ad hocness for an acceptable explanation or explanans, and I isolate some persistent errors in his analysis. Second, Popper is barking up the wrong tree in proscribing reductions in empirical content in novel hypotheses. Such reductions may constitute scientific progress. He fails to show that ad hoc hypothesis are the threat to science he claims.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:13767

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #auxiliary hypothesis #ad hoc hypothesis #ad hocness #circularity #empirical content #testability #falsifiability #falsification #refutation #Galileo #Neptune #Karl Popper #Adolf Grunbaum #W. Newton-Smith #210000 Science - General #440102 Epistemology #440100 Philosophy
Tipo

Journal Article