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El. knyga: What I Do Not Believe, and Other Essays

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Synthese Library 38
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Jan-2020
  • Leidėjas: Springer
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789402417395
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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Serija: Synthese Library 38
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Jan-2020
  • Leidėjas: Springer
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9789402417395
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Fifty years have passed since Norwood Russell Hanson's unexpected death, yet he remains an important voice in philosophy of science. This book is a revised and expanded edition of a collection of Hanson's essays originally published in 1971, edited by Stephen Toulmin and Harry Woolf. The new volume features a comprehensive introduction by Matthew Lund (Rowan University) and two new essays. The first is "Observation and Explanation: A Guide to Philosophy of Science", originally published as a posthumous book by Harper and Row. This essay, written near the end of Hanson’s life, represents his mature philosophy of science. The second new addition, Hanson's essay "The Trial of Galileo", is something of a "lost" work – it was only published in a small run collection on famous trials and was left out of the published lists of Hanson’s works. Ever the outspoken firebrand, Hanson found many lessons and warnings from Galileo's trial that were relevant to Cold War America.

This volume not only contains Hanson's best-known work in history and philosophy of science, but also highlights the breadth of his philosophical thought. Hanson balanced extreme versatility with a unified approach to conceptual and philosophical problems. Hanson's central insight is that philosophy and science both strive to render the world intelligible -- the various concepts central to our attempts to make sense of the world are interdependent, and cannot operate, or even be fully understood, independently. The essays included in this collection present Hanson's thinking on religious belief, theory, observation, meaning, cosmology, modality, logic, and philosophy of mind. This collection also includes Hanson's lectures on the theory of flight, Hanson's greatest passion.

Part I Philosophy of Science
1 A Picture Theory of Theory-Meaning
3(36)
2 On Elementary Particle Theory
39(10)
3 Some Philosophical Aspects of Contemporary Cosmologies
49(12)
4 Stability Proofs and Consistency Proofs: A Loose Analogy
61(20)
5 Observation and Explanation: A Guide to Philosophy of Science
81(44)
Part II History of Science
6 Leverrier: The Zenith and Nadir of Newtonian Mechanics
125(22)
7 The Contributions of Other Disciplines to Nineteenth Century Physics
147(10)
8 The Trial of Galileo
157(16)
Part III General Philosophy
9 On Being in Two Places at Once
173(12)
10 Copernicus' Role in Kant's Revolution
185(8)
11 It's Actual, So It's Possible
193(10)
12 On Having the Same Visual Experiences
203(10)
13 Mental Events Yet Again: Retrospect on Some Old Arguments
213(20)
Part IV Logic
14 Imagining the Impossible
233(6)
15 On the Impossibility of Any Future Metaphysics
239(10)
16 Good Inductive Reasons
249(12)
17 A Budget of Cross-Type Inferences, or Invention Is the Mother of Necessity
261(20)
18 The Irrelevance of History of Science to Philosophy of Science
281(12)
19 The Idea of a Logic of Discovery
293(12)
Part V Religion
20 The Agnostic's Dilemma
305(6)
21 What I Don't Believe
311(20)
Part VI The Theory of Flight
22 Introduction
331(2)
23 Lecture One: The Discovery of Air
333(18)
24 Lecture Two: The Shape of an Idea
351(14)
25 Lecture Three: The Idea of a Shape
365