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COLLOQUIA & CONFERENCES
A FUNCTION FOR FICTIONS: EXPANDING THE
SCOPE OF SCIENCE
Eric Winsberg
Department of Philosophy
University of South Florida
January 16, 2007
Tuesday, 4:00pm-6:00pm
Nursing, Room 127
To a first approximation, fictions are representations that don't concern
themselves with truth. Science, to be sure, is full of representations.
But the representations offered to us by science, or so we are inclined to
think, are supposed to aim at truth, (or at least one of its cousins:
empirical adequacy, or reliability.) If the proper and immediate object
of fictions is contrary to that of science, what role could there be for
fictions in science? This paper will argue for at least one important role
for fictions in science, especially in the computationally intensive
sciences of complex physical systems
in computer simulation. Fictions are sometimes needed for extending the
useful scope of theories and model-building frameworks beyond the limits of
their traditional domains of application. One especially interesting way
in which they do this is by helping to enable model builders to sew
together incompatible theories and apply them in contexts in which neither
theory by itself will do the job.
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