The Epistemic Indispensability Argument
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Abstract
This article elaborates the epistemic indispensability argument, which fully embraces the epistemic contribution of mathematics to science, but rejects the contention that such a contribution is a reason for granting reality to mathematicalia. Section 1 introduces the distinction between ontological and epistemic readings of the indispensability argument. Section 2 outlines some of the main flaws of the first premise of the ontological reading. Section 3 advances the epistemic indispensability argument in view of both applied and pure mathematics. And Sect. 4 makes a case for the epistemic approach, which firstly calls into question the appeal to inference to the best explanation in the defense of the indispensability claim; secondly, distinguishes between mathematical and physical posits; and thirdly, argues that even though some may think that inference to the best explanation works in the postulation of physical posits, no similar considerations are avai
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/171587
DOI: 10.1007/s10838-018-9437-9
ISSN: 15728587
09254560
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Journal for General Philosophy of Science, Volumen 50, Issue 1, 2019, Pages 145-161
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