Understanding Scientific Theories: An Assessment of Developments, 1969–1998 [Book Review]

Philosophy of Science 67 (3):S102-S115 (2000)
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Abstract

The positivistic Received View construed scientific theories syntactically as axiomatic calculi where theoretical terms were given a partial semantic interpretation via correspondence rules connecting them to observation statements. This paper assesses what, with hindsight, seem the most important defects in the Received View; surveys the main proposed successor analyses to the Received View—various Semantic Conception versions and the Structuralist Analysis; evaluates how well they avoid those defects; examines what new problems they face and where the most promising require further development or leave unanswered questions; explores implications of recent work on models for understanding theories; and rebuts the few criticisms of the Semantic Conception that have surfaced.

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Author Profiles

Nick Huggett
University of Illinois, Chicago
Steven French
University of Leeds

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