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قیمت کتاب چاپی:
۵۷۰۰۰۰۰ريال
تعداد مشاهده:
۳




What is a Law of Nature?

پدیدآوران:
ناشر:
CAMBRIDGE
دسته بندی: فلسفه، جامعه شناسي و تاريخ حقوق. - فلسفه حقوق

شابک: ۹۷۸۱۱۰۷۱۴۲۳۱۲

سال چاپ:۲۰۱۶

۱۹۰ صفحه - رقعي (شوميز) - چاپ ۱
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David Armstrong’s What is a Law of Nature? is a beautiful book. It offers its readers an exciting philosophical problem at the busy intersection of metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophy of science – namely, what makes certain facts constitute matters of natural law? How do laws of nature (such as, according to current science, the fact that electric charge is conserved) differ from accidents (such as, in Reichenbach’s example from Elements of Symbolic Logic, the fact that all solid gold cubes are smaller than one cubic mile)? In virtue of what is the former a law of nature whereas the latter is a coincidence – a ‘historical accident on the cosmic scale’ (Kneale, ‘Natural Laws and Contrary-to-Fact Conditionals’)? I am one of the many students who, after reading Armstrong’s magisterial book, was firmly in the grip of this problem. It has never let go. Armstrong’s book exemplifies a familiar pattern of philosophical exposition. Armstrong begins by marshalling a wide variety of arguments against various proposed answers to his title question. His systematic exploration of the resources available to ‘regularity accounts’ of law ultimately leads him to investigate the advantages of and obstacles facing David Lewis’s ‘Best System Account’. Having sharpened the challenges facing any proposal, Armstrong then gives his own account of what laws of nature are: contingent relations of ‘nomic necessitation’ among properties (i.e., universals). Armstrong works out his proposal methodically, displaying both its strengths and its difficulties. (Fred Dretske (in ‘Laws of Nature’) and Michael Tooley (in ‘The Nature of Laws’) made roughly similar proposals at about the same time as Armstrong.)
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