On the danger of half-truths (Q1344854): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Latest revision as of 11:06, 30 July 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | On the danger of half-truths |
scientific article |
Statements
On the danger of half-truths (English)
0 references
22 February 1995
0 references
Defeatism is the view that in scientific research it is wiser to seek to elaborate a theory that is only approximately true than to aim for one that is exactly right. This view may look plausible although is not widely held. However, the authors aim to show that at least under some circumstances, defeatism is an obstacle for discovering even approximate truth; the search for approximately true theories may lead to failure. Under such circumstances, the pursuit of exact truth is the surest path to scientific success, even in the approximate sense. To show this, the authors elaborate an idealized model of empirical discovery within which the concepts of exact and approximate success are formally represented. They then show that some kinds of discovery problems can be approximately solved only by scientists who advance theories designed to be entirely accurate. -- The authors emphasize that this is not intended as a decisive argument against defeatism. It remains possible that defeatism is advantageous for maximizing scientific insight across the whole spectrum of discovery problems, or advisable in various specific domains, such as quantum physics.
0 references
philosophy of science
0 references
empirical research
0 references
defeatism
0 references
approximate truth
0 references
exact truth
0 references
model of empirical discovery
0 references