Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Extending Ourselves : Computational Science, Empiricism, and Scientific Method - Paul Humphreys
eTextbook alternate format product

Instant online reading.
Don't wait for delivery!

Extending Ourselves

Computational Science, Empiricism, and Scientific Method

By: Paul Humphreys

Paperback | 29 November 2006 | Edition Number 2

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $153.95

$80.75

48%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $20.19 with

 or 

Ships in 10 to 15 business days

Computational methods such as computer simulations, Monte Carlo methods, and agent-based modeling have become the dominant techniques in many areas of science. Extending Ourselves contains the first systematic philosophical account of these new methods, and how they require a different approach to scientific method. Paul Humphreys draws a parallel between the ways in which such computational methods have enhanced our abilities to mathematically model the world, and the more familiar ways in which scientific instruments have expanded our access to the empirical world. This expansion forms the basis for a new kind of empiricism, better suited to the needs of science than the older anthropocentric forms of empiricism. Human abilities are no longer the ultimate standard of epistemological correctness. Humphreys also includes arguments for the primacy of properties rather than objects, the need to consider technological constraints when appraising scientific methods, and a detailed account of how the path from computational template to scientific application is constructed. This last feature allows us to hold a form of selective realism in which anti-realist arguments based on formal reconstructions of theories can be avoided. One important consequence of the rise of computational methods is that the traditional organization of the sciences is being replaced by an organization founded on computational templates. Extending Ourselves will be of interest to philosophers of science, epistemologists, and to anyone interested in the role played by computers in modern science.
Industry Reviews
"Many of the issues raised here are important and and deserving of the attention the author pays to them." --Choice "This book is an excellent philosophical appraisal of the roles played by computers in modern science...an excellent philosophical discussion of the role of computational models in physics."--Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews "Many of the issues raised here are important and deserving of the attention the author pays to them."--Choice "This book is an excellent philosophical appraisal of the roles played by computers in modern science...an excellent philosophical discussion of the role of computational models in physics."--Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

More in Philosophy of Science

Big Sky : When the Emu Left the Earth - Bruce Pascoe

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
The Demon-Haunted World : Science as a Candle in the Dark - Carl Sagan
Quantum 2.0 : The Past, Present, and Future of Quantum Physics - Paul Davies
Meditations : The Philosophy Classic - Marcus Aurelius

RRP $24.95

$21.75

13%
OFF
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions : 50th Anniversary Edition - Thomas S. Kuhn
God, the Science, the Evidence - Michel-Yves Bollore

RRP $48.99

$38.75

21%
OFF
The Black Swan : The Impact of the Highly Improbable - Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Prove It : A Scientific Guide for the Post-Truth Era - Elizabeth Finkel
Life 3.0 : Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence - Max Tegmark
Traversal - Maria Popova

Hardcover

$54.75

Quantum History : A New Materialist Philosophy - Slavoj Žižek
I Am a Strange Loop - Douglas Hofstadter

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
Man-Made : How the bias of the past is being built into the future - Tracey Spicer
The Greatest Show On Earth : The Evidence for Evolution - Richard Dawkins
The Universal One - Walter Russell

RRP $54.99

$41.75

24%
OFF