现代物理科学的起源:《奇迹论》中的一些段落

Gonzalo Munévar
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摘要

哥白尼革命的胜利通常与科学方法的引入(主要是伽利略)联系在一起。科学的本质大概取决于观察对理论进行判断的方式。根据经验主义,这就是科学实践如何改善我们的世界观。一些倾向于历史的科学哲学家,最著名的是库恩和费耶阿本德,坚持关注伽利略实际上说了什么和做了什么。令人震惊的是,他将一把匕首刺穿了经验主义的心脏:观察并不比理论更重要,因为观察本身就假设了理论。这就是他在驳斥亚里士多德的“塔论”时所论证的,根据亚里士多德的“塔论”,从塔上掉下来的石头会直接掉到塔的底部。如果是这样的话,地球就不能旋转了,因为它会带着塔一起旋转,这就使我们对石头飞行的观察大为不同。根据伽利略的说法,要得出石头确实垂直下落的结论,需要假设地球不移动——这是一个有争议的理论问题。考虑到伽利略对科学本质的正确理解,我认为费耶阿本德的扩散原理是一种认识,即后者的一个好策略是阐述激进的替代方案,并在其基础上重新考虑什么是证据。此外,人类大脑产生的科学应该以进化理论和神经科学为基础进行分析。从这个角度来看,我们或许能够为相对主义的合理概念辩护。这些考虑导致了我的新书的主要论点,一个理论的奇迹:进化,大脑,和科学的激进性质(科学哲学,弗农出版社,威尔明顿-马拉加2021)。我希望能吸引读者对在那里发展起来的一些问题进行讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Origin of Modern Physical Science: Some Passages from A Theory of Wonder
The triumph of the Copernican revolution is commonly associated with the introduction of the scientific method, mainly by Galileo. The nature of science presumably depends on the way observation passes judgment on theory. This is how, according to empiricism, the practice of science improves our worldviews. Some historically inclined philosophers of science, most notably Kuhn and Feyerabend, have insisted on paying attention to what Galileo actually said and did. Shockingly, he drives a dagger through the heart of empiricism: observation does not have such priority over theory, because observation itself assumes theory. This is what he argues when dismantling Aristotle’s Tower Argument, according to which a stone dropped from a tower falls straight down to the base of the tower. If this is so, the Earth cannot rotate, for it would carry the tower with it, making our observation of the stone’s flight wildly different. According to Galileo, to conclude that the stone really falls vertically requires the assumption that the Earth does not move – the theoretical issue in question. Given Galileo’s proper understanding of the nature of science, I view Feyerabend’s principle of proliferation as the realization that a good strategy for the latter is to elaborate radical alternatives and, on their basis, reconsider what counts as evidence. Moreover, a science produced by human brains should be analyzed on the basis of evolutionary theory and neuroscience. From that perspective, we may be able to defend a sensible notion of relativism. These considerations have led me to the main arguments of my new book, A Theory of Wonder: Evolution, Brain, and the Radical Nature of Science (Philosophy of Science, Vernon Press, Wilmington — Malaga 2021). I hope to entice the reader into a discussion of some of the issues developed there.
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