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Full Description
Science has multiple goals: to describe the world, as it is now; to predict the future and to make inferences about the past. Science also aims to understand the world - to explain why it is the way it is. But what does it take to explain a phenomenon? How does science generate understanding and what does that take?
In this thorough and clearly written introduction to scientific explanation, Arnon Levy explores the following problems and questions:
the background to the topic of scientific explanation, particularly the questions of what an explanation is, what makes a good explanation and why seek them in the first place
empiricism about explanation: Hempel's deductive-nomological model and its problems
unificationism about explanation: must good scientific explanations fit into an overall 'explanatory store'?
causation and explanation: Lewis's description-based model, Woodward's interventionist view and Strevens's criterion of selection theory
connections between explanation and understanding
models, idealization and explanation
non-causal explanation and explanation in non-scientific contexts
the nature of understanding.
Additional features, such as chapter summaries, suggestions for further reading and a glossary, make this an excellent resource for students of philosophy of science, metaphysics and epistemology.
Contents
1. Introduction: what this book (and isn't) about 2. The history (and prehistory) of scientific explanation 3. The Move to Causal Accounts 4. Explanation and Difference-making 5. Production and Mechanistic Explanation 6. Models and Explanation 7. Beyond Causal Explanation 8. What is Understanding 9. Connecting understanding and explanation 10. Coda: the place of explanation. Glossary Index