Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature

Humean interpretations claim that laws of nature merely summarize events. Non-Humean interpretations claim that laws force events to occur in certain patterns. First, I show that the Lewis/Ramsey account of lawhood, which claims that laws are axioms or theorems of the simplest strongest summary of e...

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Other Authors: Hermes, Charles Monroe (authoraut)
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Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
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Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4091
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spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1822872020-06-13T03:07:12Z Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature Hermes, Charles Monroe (authoraut) Mele, Alfred R. (professor directing dissertation) Kangas, David (outside committee member) Rawling, J. Piers (committee member) Department of Philosophy (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf Humean interpretations claim that laws of nature merely summarize events. Non-Humean interpretations claim that laws force events to occur in certain patterns. First, I show that the Lewis/Ramsey account of lawhood, which claims that laws are axioms or theorems of the simplest strongest summary of events, provides the best Humean interpretation of laws. The strongest non-Humean account, the scientific essentialist position, grounds laws of nature in essential non-reducible dispositional properties held by natural kinds. The scientific essentialist account entails that laws are a posteriori necessary truths. After showing that these are the best Humean and non-Humean accounts, I demonstrate that the Lewis/Ramsey account is better equipped for interpreting dispositions and counterfactuals. One distinction between the two accounts is whether counterfactuals, whose antecedents are physically possible, sometimes require closest worlds with different laws than the laws of the base world. On the Lewis/Ramsey account non-legal worlds will be necessary. If laws are merely summaries of events that occur then a world where the events are drastically different will often have different laws. The scientific essentialist, however, must demand that laws are the same in counterfactual reasoning because she grounds counterfactual reasoning in the essential dispositional properties of natural kinds. Recently, problems have developed for counterfactual analysis of dispositions due to finkish dispositions, mimicked dispositions, and masked dispositions. These difficulties have led some to abandon reductive accounts of dispositions. Doing so makes positions like scientific essentialism tenable. Yet, while scientific essentialism demands that dispositional properties cannot be reduced to categorical properties, the Humean has the opposite commitment. If dispositional properties are primitives in our ontology, then there is a stronger tie between events than Humeans admit. So, another major disagreement between these accounts is whether dispositions can be reduced. After examining why many attempts at reducing dispositions have failed, I offer one suggestion of how to reduce dispositions and demonstrate that keeping dispositional properties as primitives in our ontology is worse than the solution I offer. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Philosophy in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Summer Semester, 2006. June 23, 2006. Laws of Nature, Essentialism, Counterfactuals, Dispositions Includes bibliographical references. Alfred R. Mele, Professor Directing Dissertation; David Kangas, Outside Committee Member; J. Piers Rawling, Committee Member. Philosophy FSU_migr_etd-4091 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4091 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A182287/datastream/TN/view/Scientific%20Essentialism%20and%20the%20Lewis/Ramsey%20Account%20of%20Laws%20of%20Nature.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
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topic Philosophy
spellingShingle Philosophy
Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
description Humean interpretations claim that laws of nature merely summarize events. Non-Humean interpretations claim that laws force events to occur in certain patterns. First, I show that the Lewis/Ramsey account of lawhood, which claims that laws are axioms or theorems of the simplest strongest summary of events, provides the best Humean interpretation of laws. The strongest non-Humean account, the scientific essentialist position, grounds laws of nature in essential non-reducible dispositional properties held by natural kinds. The scientific essentialist account entails that laws are a posteriori necessary truths. After showing that these are the best Humean and non-Humean accounts, I demonstrate that the Lewis/Ramsey account is better equipped for interpreting dispositions and counterfactuals. One distinction between the two accounts is whether counterfactuals, whose antecedents are physically possible, sometimes require closest worlds with different laws than the laws of the base world. On the Lewis/Ramsey account non-legal worlds will be necessary. If laws are merely summaries of events that occur then a world where the events are drastically different will often have different laws. The scientific essentialist, however, must demand that laws are the same in counterfactual reasoning because she grounds counterfactual reasoning in the essential dispositional properties of natural kinds. Recently, problems have developed for counterfactual analysis of dispositions due to finkish dispositions, mimicked dispositions, and masked dispositions. These difficulties have led some to abandon reductive accounts of dispositions. Doing so makes positions like scientific essentialism tenable. Yet, while scientific essentialism demands that dispositional properties cannot be reduced to categorical properties, the Humean has the opposite commitment. If dispositional properties are primitives in our ontology, then there is a stronger tie between events than Humeans admit. So, another major disagreement between these accounts is whether dispositions can be reduced. After examining why many attempts at reducing dispositions have failed, I offer one suggestion of how to reduce dispositions and demonstrate that keeping dispositional properties as primitives in our ontology is worse than the solution I offer. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Philosophy in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Summer Semester, 2006. === June 23, 2006. === Laws of Nature, Essentialism, Counterfactuals, Dispositions === Includes bibliographical references. === Alfred R. Mele, Professor Directing Dissertation; David Kangas, Outside Committee Member; J. Piers Rawling, Committee Member.
author2 Hermes, Charles Monroe (authoraut)
author_facet Hermes, Charles Monroe (authoraut)
title Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
title_short Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
title_full Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
title_fullStr Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
title_full_unstemmed Scientific Essentialism and the Lewis/Ramsey Account of Laws of Nature
title_sort scientific essentialism and the lewis/ramsey account of laws of nature
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4091
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