
Scientific Concepts and Investigative Practice
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Recent philosophy and history of science has seen a surge of interest in the role of concepts in scientific research. Scholars working in this new field focus on scientific concepts, rather than theories, as units of analysis and on the ways in which concepts are formed and used rather than on what they represent. They analyze what has traditionally been called the context of discovery, rather than (or in addition to) the context of justification. And they examine the dynamics of research rather than the status of the finished research results.
This volume provides detailed case studies and general analyses to address questions raised by these points, such as:
- Can concepts be clearly distinguished from the sets of beliefs we have about their referents?
- What - if any - sense can be made of the separation between concepts and theories?
- Can we distinguish between empirical and theoretical concepts?
- Are there interesting similarities and differences between the role of concepts in the empirical sciences and in mathematics?
- What underlying notion of
investigative practice
could be drawn on to explicate the role of concept in such practice?
- From a philosophical point of view, is the distinction between discovery and justification a helpful frame of reference for inquiring into the dynamics of research?
- From a historiographical point of view, does a focus on concepts face the danger of falling back into an old-fashioned history of ideas?
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Content
2 - Concept as Vessel and Concept as Use [Seite 29]
3 - Rethinking Scientific Concepts for Research Contexts: The Case of the Classical Gene [Seite 53]
4 - The Dynamics of Scientific Concepts: The Relevance of Epistemic Aims and Values [Seite 81]
5 - Goals and Fates of Concepts: The Case of Magnetic Poles [Seite 111]
6 - Mathematical Concepts and Investigative Practice [Seite 133]
7 - Experimentation and the Meaning of Scientific Concepts [Seite 155]
8 - Exploratory Experiments, Concept Formation, and Theory Construction in Psychology [Seite 173]
9 - Early Concepts in Investigative Practice - The Case of the Virus [Seite 197]
10 - Scientific Concepts in the Engineering Sciences: Epistemic Tools for Creating and Intervening with Phenomena [Seite 225]
11 - Modeling Practices in Conceptual Innovation: An Ethnographic Study of a Neural Engineering Research Laboratory [Seite 251]
12 - Conceptual Development in Interdisciplinary Research [Seite 277]
13 - List of Contributors [Seite 299]
14 - Index [Seite 303]
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