Published December 12, 2024 | Version 1
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Why do philosophers disagree on how the sciences relate? A metaphilosophical analysis

  • 1. ROR icon National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
  • 2. ROR icon University of Bristol

Contributors

Description

How the natural sciences relate and what these relations tell us about the world have been examined in philosophy for a long time. Yet despite the enormous advances in the natural sciences and the growing consensus among scientists about which theories are reliable, philosophers starkly disagree on how the sciences relate to each other. I identify the main reasons for this disagreement and argue that philosophers will never agree on how the sciences relate. I support this by invoking van Fraassen’s idea of stances. Specifically, I show that positions on inter-theory relations are motivated by philosophers’ stances towards methodological, normative and existential considerations. As such, disagreements among positions don't admit to adjudication, thus explaining why they persist. I then examine whether philosophical disagreement is something to be worried about and argue that there are in principle and pragmatic reasons that prompt such a worry. To overcome this, an explicit identification of the stances that motivate differing views is required within this debate. 

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Additional details

Funding

CREACAL – CHEMICAL REACTIONS AS CAUSES AND LAWS 101064082
European Commission

Dates

Updated
2024-12-11