McMullin's Inference: A Case for Realism? with Bas C. van Fraassen, “Scientific Realism and the Empiricist Challenge: An Introduction to Ernan McMullin's Aquinas Lecture”; and Ernan McMullin, “The Inference that Makes Science”
THE INFERENCE THAT MAKES SCIENCE
Article first published online: 24 FEB 2013
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9744.2012.01319.x
© 2013 by the Joint Publication Board of Zygon
Additional Information
How to Cite
McMullin, E. (2013), THE INFERENCE THAT MAKES SCIENCE. Zygon, 48: 143–191. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9744.2012.01319.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 24 FEB 2013
- Article first published online: 24 FEB 2013
Keywords:
- abduction;
- Thomas Aquinas;
- Aristotle;
- causality;
- demonstration;
- Galileo Galilei;
- inference;
- realism;
- science;
- theory
Abstract In his Aquinas Lecture 1992 at Marquette University, Ernan McMullin discusses whether there is a pattern of inference that particularly characterizes the sciences of nature. He pursues this theme both on a historical and a systematic level. There is a continuity of concern across the ages that separate the Greek inquiry into nature from our own vastly more complex scientific enterprise. But there is also discontinuity, the abandonment of earlier ideals as unworkable. The natural sciences involve many types of inference; three of these interlock in a special way to produce “retroductive inference,” the kind of complex inference that supports causal theory.

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