
Not all scientific explanations work by describing causal connections between events or the world's overall causal structure. Some mathematical proofs explain why the theorems being proved hold. In this book, Marc Lange proposes philosophical accounts of many kinds of non-causal explanations in science and mathematics. These topics have been unjustly neglected in the philosophy of science and mathematics.One important kind of non-causal scientific explanation is termed explanation by constraint. These explanations work by providing information about what makes certain facts especially inevitable - more necessary than the ordinary laws of nature connecting causes to their effects. Facts explained in this way transcend the hurly-burly of cause and effect. Many physicists have regarded the laws of kinematics, the great conservation laws, the coordinate transformations, and the parallelogram of forces as having explanations by constraint. This book presents an original account of explanations by constraint, concentrating on a variety of examples from classical physics and special relativity. This book also offers original accounts of several other varieties of non-causal scientific explanation. Dimensional explanations work by showing how some law of nature arises merely from the dimensional relations among the quantities involved. Really statistical explanations include explanations that appeal to regression toward the mean and other canonical manifestations of chance. Lange provides an original account of what makes certain mathematical proofs but not others explain what they prove. Mathematical explanation connects to a host of other important mathematical ideas, including coincidences in mathematics, the significance of giving multiple proofs of the same result, and natural properties in mathematics. Introducing many examples drawn from actual science and mathematics, with extended discussions of examples from Lagrange, Desargues, Thomson, Sylvester, Maxwell, Raylei
This book investigates the nature and structure of scientific and mathematical explanations that do not rely on causal connections. Marc Lange, a professor of philosophy, utilizes a rigorous analytical framework to categorize these non-causal explanations. By examining historical and contemporary examples from physics and mathematics, he argues that certain facts possess a form of necessity that transcends standard causal laws.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the philosophy of science, particularly for its formalization of non-causal explanatory structures. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for advanced students and scholars in the field.
Page Count:
512
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190269499
ISBN-13:
9780190269494
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