Max Scheler
Gesellschaft

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237512

Truthlikeness, rationality and scientific method

Jesus P. Zamora Bonilla

pp. 321-335

Abstrakt

I. A. Kieseppä's criticism of the methodological use of the theory of verisimilitude, and D. B. Resnik's arguments against the explanation of scientific method by appeal to scientific aims are critically considered. Since the notion of verisimilitude was introduced as an attempt to show that science can be seen as a rational enterprise in the pursuit of truth, defenders of the verisimilitude programme need to show that scientific norms can be interpreted (at least in principle) as rules that try to increase the degree of truthlikeness of scientific theories. This possibility is explored for several approaches to the problem of verisimilitude.

Publication details

Published in:

(2000) Synthese 122 (3).

Seiten: 321-335

DOI: 10.1023/A:1005269826141

Referenz:

Zamora Bonilla Jesus P. (2000) „Truthlikeness, rationality and scientific method“. Synthese 122 (3), 321–335.