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Abductive Reasoning in Science
This Element shows abductive reasoning is ubiquitous, especially in science. But what is it exactly and why does it work?
Finnur Dellsén (Author)
9781009500524, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 17 October 2024
82 pages
23.5 x 16.2 x 1.1 cm, 0.27 kg
'[A] well written, clear, and valuable introduction to the topic of abductive reasoning in philosophy of science.' Andrew S. Reynolds, Metascience
In abductive reasoning, scientific theories are evaluated on the basis of how well they would explain the available evidence. There are a number of subtly different accounts of this type of reasoning, most of which are inspired by the popular slogan 'Inference to the Best Explanation.' However, these accounts disagree about exactly how to spell out the slogan so as to avoid various problems for abductive reasoning. This Element aims, firstly, to give an opinionated overview both of the many accounts of abductive reasoning that have been proposed and the problems that have motivated them; and, secondly, to critically evaluate these accounts in a way that points toward a systematic view of the nature and purpose of abductive reasoning in science. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Introduction
1. A brief history of abductive reasoning
2. Contemporary accounts of abductive reasoning
3. Why prefer explanatory hypotheses?
4. Is abductive reasoning irrational?
Conclusion
References.
Subject Areas: Philosophy [HP]
