Novel Predictions and the No Miracle Argument

被引:19
作者
Alai, Mario [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Urbino Carlo Bo, Dept Basic Sci & Fdn, I-61029 Urbino, Italy
关键词
PERIODIC LAW; REALISM;
D O I
10.1007/s10670-013-9495-7
中图分类号
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ;
摘要
Predictivists use the no miracle argument to argue that "novel" predictions are decisive evidence for theories, while mere accommodation of "old" data cannot confirm to a significant degree. But deductivists claim that since confirmation is a logical theory-data relationship, predicted data cannot confirm more than merely deduced data, and cite historical cases in which known data confirmed theories quite strongly. On the other hand, the advantage of prediction over accommodation is needed by scientific realists to resist Laudan's criticisms of the no miracle argument. So, if the deductivists are right, the most powerful argument for realism collapses. There seems to be an inescapable contradiction between these prima facie plausible arguments of predictivists and deductivists; but this puzzle can be solved by understanding what exactly counts as novelty, if novel predictions must support the no miracle argument, i.e., if they must be explainable only by the truth of theories. Taking my cues from the use-novelty tradition, I argue that (1) the predicted data must not be used essentially in building the theory or choosing the auxiliary assumptions. This is possible if the theory and its auxiliary assumptions are plausible independently of the predicted data, and I analyze the consequences of this requirement in terms of best explanation of diverse bodies of data. Moreover, the predicted data must be (2) a priori improbable, and (3) heterogeneous to the essentially used data. My proposed notion of novelty, therefore, is not historical, but functional. Hence, deductivists are right that confirmation is independent of time and of historical contingencies such as if the theorist knew a datum, used it, or intended to accommodate it. Predictivists, however, are right that not all consequences confirm equally, and confirmation is not purely a logical theory-data relation, as it crucially involves background epistemic conditions and the notion of best explanation. Conditions (1)-(3) make the difference between prediction and accommodation, and account for the confirming power of theoretical virtues such as non ad-hocness, non-fudging, non-overfitting, independence and consilience. I thus show that functional novelty (a) avoids the deductivist objections to predictivism, (b) is a gradual notion, in accordance with the common intuition that confirmation comes in degrees, and (c) supports the no miracle argument, so vindicating scientific realism.
引用
收藏
页码:297 / 326
页数:30
相关论文
共 56 条
[11]  
Brush StephenG., 1994, PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, V1994, P133
[12]  
Clarke S., 2002, RECENT THEMES PHILOS
[13]   Empirical success or explanatory success: What does current scientific realism need to explain? [J].
Doppelt, Gerald .
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, 2005, 72 (05) :1076-1087
[14]   EINSTEIN AND HILBERT - 2 MONTHS IN HISTORY OF GENERAL RELATIVITY [J].
EARMAN, J ;
GLYMOUR, C .
ARCHIVE FOR HISTORY OF EXACT SCIENCES, 1978, 19 (03) :291-308
[15]  
Friedman Michael., 1983, Foundations of Space-Time Theories
[16]   PREDICTING NOVEL FACTS [J].
GARDNER, MR .
BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, 1982, 33 (01) :1-15
[17]  
Grunbaum A., 1988, LIMITS DEDUCTIVISM
[18]   Prediction versus accommodation and the risk of overfitting [J].
Hitchcock, C ;
Sober, E .
BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, 2004, 55 (01) :1-34
[19]   What's really at issue with novel predictions? [J].
Hudson, Robert G. .
SYNTHESE, 2007, 155 (01) :1-20
[20]  
Hutchison Keith, 2002, RECENT THEMES PHILOS, P91