Charpa Ulrich
Leo Baeck Institute London, 4 Devonshire Street, London W1W 5LB, England.
Hist Philos Life Sci. 2008;30(1):7-30.
This article opens with general and historical remarks on philosophy of science's problems with the concept of discovery. Then, drawing upon simple examples of Watson's and Crick's non-philosophical usage, I characterize phrases of the type "x discovers y" semantically. It will subsequently be shown how widespread philosophical discussion on discovery violates the semantic constraints of phrases of the type "x discovers y." Then I provide a philosophical reconstruction of "x discovers y" that is in keeping with the "folk" notion of discovery. The philosophical ingredients of this approach are taken from a certain aspect of action theory and from epistemological reliabilism. The approach draws upon the concept of superior action and connects this concept to progressive research. In contrast to normal actions, superior actions are primarily explained by competencies. This perspective includes reminders of what some nineteenth-century philosopher-scientists had advocated as a competence-oriented view on scientific research. Finally, this approach is applied to the case of Watson's and Crick's discovery.
本文开篇对科学哲学在发现概念上存在的问题进行了一般性的历史评述。接着,借助沃森和克里克非哲学用法的简单例子,我从语义上对“x发现y”这类短语进行了刻画。随后将展示关于发现的广泛哲学讨论是如何违反“x发现y”这类短语的语义限制的。然后我对“x发现y”进行了一种与“民间”发现概念相符的哲学重构。这种方法的哲学要素取自行动理论的某个方面以及认识论可靠主义。该方法借鉴了卓越行动的概念,并将这一概念与进步性研究联系起来。与正常行动不同,卓越行动主要由能力来解释。这种观点让人想起一些19世纪的哲学家兼科学家所倡导的以能力为导向的科学研究观点。最后,这种方法被应用于沃森和克里克的发现案例。