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  1. Reality, measurement, and the state of the system in quantum mechanics.Edwin C. Kemble - 1951 - Philosophy of Science 18 (4):273-299.
    It has always been the ideal of science to discover laws of nature on which we can all agree. Agreement requires evidence independent of individual judgment, i.e., objective evidence. We apply the term objective to such unbiased scientific evidence because we associate it with an external world of objects that we conceive to be the origin of our information. This external world is instinctively invented by each of us as a means of dealing with invariant patterns in his private world (...)
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  2.  23
    The probability concept.Edwin C. Kemble - 1941 - Philosophy of Science 8 (2):204-232.
    The writer of this paper is not an expert on probability from either the mathematical or the philosophical side, but a theoretical physicist forced by the exigencies of work in his own field to make his peace with the concept of probability. The present contribution is a sequel to remarks on two different types of probability in a recent paper on the relation between statistical mechanics and thermodynamics.
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  3.  42
    In memory of Philipp Frank.Gerald Holton, Edwin C. Kemble, W. V. Quine, S. S. Stevens & Morton G. White - 1968 - Philosophy of Science 35 (1):1-5.
  4.  5
    Physical Science, its Structure and Development: From Geometric Astronomy to the Mechanical Theory of Heat.Edwin C. Kemble - 1966 - MIT Press.
    This introduction to physical science combines a rigorous discussion of scientific principles with sufficient historical background and philosophic interpretation to add a new dimension of interest to the accounts given in more conventional textbooks. It brings out the twofold character of physical science as an expanding body of verifiable knowledge and as an organized human activity whose goals and values are major factors in the revolutionary changes sweeping over the world today.Professor Kemble insists that to understand science one must understand (...)
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