Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Where do laws of nature come from?
- Part II Laws and theier limits
- Part III The boundaries of quantum and classical physics and the territories they share
- 8 How bridge principles set the domain of quantum theory
- 9 How quantum and classical theories relate
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - How bridge principles set the domain of quantum theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Where do laws of nature come from?
- Part II Laws and theier limits
- Part III The boundaries of quantum and classical physics and the territories they share
- 8 How bridge principles set the domain of quantum theory
- 9 How quantum and classical theories relate
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Theory and the building of models
In the 1960s when studies of theory change were in their heyday, models were no part of theory. Nor did they figure in how we represent what happens in the world. Theory represented the world. Models were there to tell us how to change theory. Their role was heuristic, whether informally, as in Mary Hesse's neutral and negative analogies, or as part of the paraphernalia of a more formally laid out research programme, as with Imré Lakatos. The 1960s were also the heyday of what Fred Suppe dubbed ‘the received view’ of theory, the axiomatic view. Theory itself was supposed to be a formal system of internal principles on the one hand – axioms and theorems – and of bridge principles on the other, principles meant to interpret the concepts of the theory, which are only partially defined by the axioms. With the realisation that axiomatic systems expressed in some one or another formal language are too limited in their expressive power and too bound to the language in which they are formulated, models came to be central to theory; they came to constitute theory. On the semantic view of theories, theories are sets of models. The sets must be precisely delimited in some way or another, but we do not need to confine ourselves to any formal language in specifying exactly what the models are that constitute the theory.
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- The Dappled WorldA Study of the Boundaries of Science, pp. 179 - 210Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999