The born-Einstein debate: Where application and explanation separate

Synthese 81 (3):271 - 282 (1989)
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Abstract

Application in science has its own structure, distinct from the structure of theoretical science, and therefore needs its own philosophy. The covering power of a formal scientific theory is no guide to its explanatory power. Explanation is too much to ask of a fundamental scientific theory. This is seen by considering two strands of the Born-Einstein debate: first the explanatory power of quantum mechanics and second, the reality of unobserved properties. The function of theoretical physics is to describe rather than to explain. Some techniques are a standard part of theory; while some aread hoc to the problems at hand. Very few of the derivations in mathematical physics are explanatory. This shows distinctly separate structures for theory and for application.

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Nancy Cartwright
London School of Economics

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Reality in science.Emma Ruttkamp - 1999 - South African Journal of Philosophy 18 (2):149-191.

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