Thought Experiments
✍ Scribed by Nenad Miscevic
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 137
- Series
- SpringerBriefs in Philosophy
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book offers a readable introduction to the main aspects of thought experimenting in philosophy and science (together with related imaginative activities in mathematics and linguistics).
It presents the main options in understanding thought experiments, from empiricism to Platonism, and discusses their strengths and weaknesses. However, it also provides some original perspectives on the topic. Firstly, it provides a new definition and analysis of thought experimenting that brings it closer to laboratory experimenting. Secondly, it develops the author’s earlier theory of “mental modelling”, proposed some decades ago by him, and some other researchers in the field as the crucial procedure in thought experimenting. The mental modelling approach links work with thought experimenting to cognitive science and to research on mental simulation which is a hot topic in present-day research. Thirdly, it proposes a principled way to respond to criticism of thought experimenting by “experimental philosophers” as they have been dominating the present-day debates. The response suggests a possible ameliorative, self-help project for thought experimenting.
Finally, the book provides a way to systematize the history of important thought experiments in science and philosophy and thus connects, in an original way, the systematic investigation of experimenting to the historical work of famous thought experiments. It is of interest to scholars interested in history of ideas and philosophy of science.
✦ Table of Contents
Preface
Contents
1 What Are Thought Experiments?
1.1 Introduction
1.1.1 Two Famous Thought Experiments
1.2 More Examples—From Science to Philosophy
1.3 What is a TE?
1.4 TEs and their Relatives
1.5 Conclusion
References
2 The Life and Importance of TEs
2.1 The Stages of TE
2.2 Intuition
2.3 The Role of TEs
References
3 Understanding Thought Experiments
3.1 Empiricist-Inferentialist Proposals
3.2 A Platonist Alternative
3.2.1 The Strong Platonist Option
3.2.2 The Conceptualist Moderate Platonist Approach
3.3 A Kantian Proposal
3.4 Imaginative-Counterfactual Approach
3.5 Mental Modelling Approaches
3.6 Conclusion
References
4 A Theory of TEs
4.1 Mental Modelling
4.2 Intuitions: Moderate Voice of Competence (MoVoC) Theory
4.3 Appendix: The Puzzles of Geometrical and Numerical Intuitions
References
5 Do TEs Have a Life of Their Own?
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Reminder: The Twin Earth Te and Its Stages
5.3 Empty Thoughts: Peter Unger’s Critism of Analytic Methodology
5.4 Stages and Traditions—From the Synchronic to the Diachronic
5.5 Trails-Traditions
References
6 The Challenge of Experimental Philosophy
6.1 X-phi-the Negative Program
6.1.1 Introduction
6.1.2 The Challenge
6.2 Defending TEs
6.2.1 The Expertise Defense of TEs
6.2.2 Stages Defense—A Proposal
6.3 Conclusion
6.4 Are Scientific TEs Better than the Philosophical Ones?
References
7 Conclusion
References
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