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Causation in science

Causation in science
-5% dte. 38,29€
36,38€
Estalvia 1,91€
Enviament
Gratuït
  • Tipus Tapa dura
  • Editorial PRINCETON
  • Autor/s Ben-Menahem, Yemima
  • ISBN13 9780691174938
  • ISBN10 0691174938
  • Pàgines 224
  • Any Edició 2018
  • Idioma Anglès
-5% dte. exclusiu web

Causation in science

Enviament
Gratuït
-5% dte.   38,29€
36,38€
Estalvia 1,91€
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This book explores the role of causal constraints in science, shifting our attention from causal relations between individual events--the focus of most philosophical treatments of causation-to a broad family of concepts and principles generating constraints on possible change. Yemima Ben-Menahem looks at determinism, locality, stability, symmetry principles, conservation laws, and the principle of least action-causal constraints that serve to distinguish events and processes that our best scientific theories mandate or allow from those they rule out.Ben-Menahem's approach reveals that causation is just as relevant to explaining why certain events fail to occur as it is to explaining events that do occur. She investigates the conceptual differences between, and interrelations of, members of the causal family, thereby clarifying problems at the heart of the philosophy of science. Ben-Menahem argues that the distinction between determinism and stability is pertinent to the philosophy of history and the foundations of statistical mechanics, and that the interplay of determinism and locality is crucial for understanding quantum mechanics. Providing historical perspective, she traces the causal constraints of contemporary science to traditional intuitions about causation, and demonstrates how the teleological appearance of some constraints is explained away in current scientific theories such as quantum mechanics.Causation in Science represents a bold challenge to both causal eliminativism and causal reductionism-the notions that causation has no place in science and that higher-level causal claims are reducible to the causal claims of fundamental physics.

Prof. Yemima Ben-Menahem is Barbara Druss Dibner Professor of the History of Science Emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a lecturer in the Department of Philosophy and Jewish Thought at Shalem College. Prof. Ben-Menahem?s areas of expertise are the philosophy of science, in particular the philosophy of modern physics, and the philosophy of history and of American Pragmatism. She is author of Conventionalism: From Poincaré to Quine (Cambridge, 2006) and editor, among others, of Hilary Putnam (Cambridge, 2005).

"Causation in Science puts forward a new way of thinking about causality and is a shining example of intelligent and sophisticated philosophical analysis. I highly recommend this book."--Margaret Morrison, author of Reconstructing Reality: Models, Mathematics, and Simulations

"An important and novel scholarly contribution. Against those who would relegate causality to ‘folk science,' Ben-Menahem convincingly argues that causal notions and their associated constraints permeate science, moreover that this is true both in fundamental sciences such as physics as well as in the higher-level sciences."--Michael Cuffaro, Rotman Institute of Philosophy, University of Western Ontario

  • Tipus Tapa dura
  • Editorial PRINCETON
  • Autor/s Ben-Menahem, Yemima
  • ISBN13 9780691174938
  • ISBN10 0691174938
  • Pàgines 224
  • Any Edició 2018
  • Idioma Anglès