: Christian Sachse
: Reductionism in the Philosophy of Science
: Walter de Gruyter GmbH& Co.KG
: 9783110323320
: Epistemische Studien / Epistemic StudiesISSN
: 1
: CHF 137.50
:
: Sonstiges
: English
: 330
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF
In contemporary philosophy of science, ontological reductionism, or the claim that everything that exists in the world is something physical, is the consensus mainstream position. Contrary to a widespread belief, this book establishes that ontological and epistemological reductionism stand or fall together. The author proposes a new strategy of conservative theory reduction that operates by means of the construction of functional sub-concepts that are coextensional with physical concepts. Thus, a complete conservative reductionism is established that vindicates both the indispensable scientific character of the special sciences and their reducibility to physics. The second part of the book works this strategy out, using the example of classical and molecular genetics.

Table of contents5
Acknowledgements9
0. Overview of the general part11
I. Ontological reductionism19
II. Epistemological reductionism67
III. Complete conservative reductionism170
IV. Overview of the biological part187
V. Classical genetics211
VI. Molecular genetics235
VII. Reduction of classical genetics tomolecular genetics261
References310
Index328
Blank Page2