Summary |
Some philosophers argue that the regularities in nature are ultimately to be explained not by laws (or only secondarily so), but by dispositional properties or powers: there are laws or regularities in nature because objects behave according to the dispositions they have. Add that certain kinds of objects have their dispositional powers essentially and the laws will even come out as metaphysically necessary. On some versions of dispositionalism, powers completely eliminate laws (Mumford, maybe Cartwright), while others think that laws exist, but are ultimately grounded in powers (Bird, Ellis). Some combine the Best System Analysis to powers (Kympton-Ney, Demarest, Williams). |