
Publication details
Year: 2013
Pages: 3439-3449
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Briggs on antirealist accounts of scientific law", Synthese 190 (16), 2013, pp. 3439-3449.
Abstract
Rachel Briggs’ critique of “antirealist” accounts of scientific law— including my own perspectivalist best-system account—is part of a project meant to show that Humean conceptions of scientific law are more problematic than has been commonly realized. Indeed, her argument provides a new challenge to the Humean, a thoroughly epistemic version of David Lewis’ “big, bad bug” for Humeanism. Still, I will argue, the antirealist (perspectivalist and expressivist) accounts she criticizes have the resources to withstand the challenge and come out stronger for it. Attention to epistemic possibilities, I argue, shows a number of advantages to a perspectivalist account of scientific law.
Cited authors
Publication details
Year: 2013
Pages: 3439-3449
Series: Synthese
Full citation:
, "Briggs on antirealist accounts of scientific law", Synthese 190 (16), 2013, pp. 3439-3449.