Compositional Abduction and Scientific Interpretation Compositional Abduction and Scientific Interpretation

Compositional Abduction and Scientific Interpretation

A Granular Approach

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Publisher Description

Abductive reasoning is a form of inference that infers some hypothesis because of what that hypothesis explains. Unlike deductive reasoning, it yields a plausible conclusion but does not definitively verify it. The theory of compositional abduction developed in this book provides a novel theory of confirmation. Aizawa uses case studies to analyse how scientists interpret the results of experiments to support compositional hypotheses (hypotheses about what things are composed of) and suggests that they use a kind of abduction. His theory is offered as an alternative account of scientific reasoning that the logical empiricists would have interpreted as hypothetico-deductive confirmation. It is also an alternative to the Peircean interpretation of the role of abduction in science. It will be valuable to philosophers of science, those working on hypothetico-deductive confirmation, Peirce's view of abduction, inference to the best explanation, and the New Mechanism. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

GENRE
Science & Nature
RELEASED
2025
December 4
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
432
Pages
PUBLISHER
Cambridge University Press
SELLER
Cambridge University Press
SIZE
16.3
MB
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