Scientific Representation Paradoxes of Perspective
by van Fraassen, Bas C.Buy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Bas van Fraassen is McCosh Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University (Emeritus after July 2008) and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, San Francisco State University. His research interests straddle philosophical logic and philosophy of science, with special interests in empiricism, (anti-)realism, probability, foundations of relativity and quantum physics, and philosophy of literature. Born in the Netherlands, he studied and taught in Canada and thereafter in the USA; he is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Science and of the Netherlands Royal Academy of Sciences. Though concentrating on philosophy of science he makes occasional forays into philosophy of literature and the connections between art, literature, and science.
Table of Contents
| Preface | p. vii |
| List of Figures | p. ix |
| Introduction: the 'picture theory of science' | p. 1 |
| Representation | |
| Representation of, Representation As | p. 11 |
| The value of distortion | p. 12 |
| How does a representation represent? | p. 15 |
| What's in a photo? | p. 20 |
| What is a representation then? | p. 22 |
| Appearance to the intellect: illumination as embedding | p. 29 |
| In conclusion | p. 30 |
| Imaging, Picturing, and Scaling | p. 33 |
| Modes of representation | p. 33 |
| What distinguishes a picture? | p. 36 |
| Mathematical imagery, distortion through abstraction | p. 39 |
| Scale models and virtuous distortion | p. 49 |
| Conclusion about imaging and scaling | p. 56 |
| Pictorial Perspective and the Indexical | p. 59 |
| Pictorial perspective and the Art of Measuring | p. 60 |
| Perspective versus Descartes's frames of reference | p. 66 |
| Mapping and perspectival self-location | p. 75 |
| What is in a map? | p. 82 |
| Visual perspective and the metaphor | p. 84 |
| Concluding empiricist postscript | p. 86 |
| Windows, Engines, and Measurement | |
| A Window on the Invisible World (?) | p. 93 |
| Instrumentation's diversity of roles | p. 94 |
| Engines of creation: engendering new phenomena | p. 100 |
| The microscope's public hallucinations | p. 101 |
| Objections to this view of 'observation by instruments' | p. 105 |
| Experimentation's diversity of roles | p. 111 |
| The Problem of Coordination | p. 115 |
| Coordination: a historical context | p. 116 |
| The problem of coordination reconceived | p. 121 |
| Mach on the history of the thermometer | p. 125 |
| Poincare's analysis of time measurement | p. 130 |
| Observables coordinated: two morals | p. 137 |
| Measurement as Representation: 1. The Physical Correlate | p. 141 |
| Physical conditions of possibility for measurement | p. 141 |
| General theory of measurement | p. 147 |
| What is not measurement | p. 156 |
| Measurement as Representation: 2. Information | p. 157 |
| What is measurement-number-assigning? | p. 158 |
| The scale as logical space | p. 164 |
| Data models and surface models | p. 166 |
| The over-arching concept for measurement | p. 172 |
| What is a measurement outcome? | p. 179 |
| Relating the views 'from above' and 'from within' | p. 184 |
| Structure and Perspective | |
| From the Bildtheorie of Science to Paradox | p. 191 |
| The Bildtheorie controversy | p. 191 |
| Representation: the problem for structuralism | p. 204 |
| The Longest Journey: Bertrand Russell | p. 213 |
| Prolegomena to Russell's conversion to structuralism | p. 213 |
| Russell's structuralist turn | p. 217 |
| Conclusion | p. 223 |
| Carnap's Lost World and Putnam's Paradox | p. 225 |
| Carnap: Der Logische Aufbau der Welt | p. 225 |
| Putnam's Paradox | p. 229 |
| Staying with Putnam: the Paradox dissolved | p. 232 |
| An Empiricist Structuralism | p. 237 |
| What could be an empiricist structuralism? | p. 237 |
| The fundamental remaining problem for a structuralist view of science | p. 239 |
| The two main dangers for an empiricist | p. 244 |
| The problem in concrete setting revisited and dissolved | p. 253 |
| Return to our epistemological question | p. 261 |
| Appearance and Reality | |
| Appearance vs. Reality in the Sciences | p. 269 |
| Appearance and reality: the real and unreal problem | p. 270 |
| Appearance versus reality at the birth of modern science | p. 270 |
| Three putative completeness criteria | p. 276 |
| Appearance vs. reality: A deeper Criterion | p. 280 |
| Phenomena versus appearances | p. 283 |
| Three-faceted representation | p. 288 |
| Rejecting the Appearance from Reality Criterion | p. 291 |
| The supervenience of mind challenge | p. 292 |
| The Great Leibnizian Escape move | p. 296 |
| The quantum mechanics challenge | p. 297 |
| Exploring the case of quantum mechanics | p. 300 |
| Supervenience? | p. 304 |
| An empiricist view | p. 304 |
| Appendices | |
| Models and theories as representations | p. 309 |
| Quantum peculiarities: fuzzy observables | p. 312 |
| Surface models and their embeddings | p. 315 |
| Retreat (?) from The Scientific Image | p. 317 |
| Notes to Appendices | p. 320 |
| Bibliography | p. 322 |
| Notes | p. 345 |
| Index | p. 399 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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