Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1160229 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•An updated discussion of scientific representation by one of the most prominent contributors to this topic over the years.•Addresses a novel distinction between deflationary and substantive accounts of representation.•Argues that some leading accounts of scientific representation are duly and legitimately deflationary.•Brings to the fore the essential connection to scientific practice that is characteristic of deflationary accounts.•Addresses in detail the analogy between deflationary conceptions of truth and scientific representation.

This paper defends the deflationary character of two recent views regarding scientific representation, namely RIG Hughes' DDI model and the inferential conception. It is first argued that these views' deflationism is akin to the homonymous position in discussions regarding the nature of truth. There, we are invited to consider the platitudes that the predicate “true” obeys at the level of practice, disregarding any deeper, or more substantive, account of its nature. More generally, for any concept X, a deflationary approach is then defined in opposition to a substantive approach, where a substantive approach to X is an analysis of X in terms of some property P, or relation R, accounting for and explaining the standard use of X. It then becomes possible to characterize a deflationary view of scientific representation in three distinct senses, namely: a “no-theory” view, a “minimalist” view, and a “use-based” view—in line with three standard deflationary responses in the philosophical literature on truth. It is then argued that both the DDI model and the inferential conception may be suitably understood in any of these three different senses. The application of these deflationary ‘hermeneutics’ moreover yields significant improvements on the DDI model, which bring it closer to the inferential conception. It is finally argued that what these approaches have in common—the key to any deflationary account of scientific representation—is the denial that scientific representation may be ultimately reduced to any substantive explanatory property of sources, or targets, or their relations.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities History
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