Wesley Salmon | |
---|---|
Born | Wesley Charles Salmon August 9, 1925 |
Died | April 22, 2001 |
Education | Wayne State University University of Chicago UCLA (PhD, 1950) |
Era | Contemporary philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic |
Institutions | Brown University |
Doctoral advisor | Hans Reichenbach |
Main interests | Confirmation theory, philosophy of science, metaphysics |
Notable ideas | Statistical-relevance model, the requirement of strict maximal specificity, mark transmission |
Wesley Charles Salmon (August 9, 1925 – April 22, 2001) was an American philosopher of science renowned for his work on the nature of scientific explanation.[2] He also worked on confirmation theory, trying to explicate how probability theory via inductive logic might help confirm and choose hypotheses.[3][4] Yet most prominently, Salmon was a realist about causality in scientific explanation,[2] although his realist explanation of causality drew ample criticism.[5] Still, his books on scientific explanation itself were landmarks of the 20th century's philosophy of science,[3] and solidified recognition of causality's important roles in scientific explanation,[2] whereas causality itself has evaded satisfactory elucidation by anyone.[6]
Under logical empiricism's influence, especially Carl Hempel's work on the "covering law" model of scientific explanation,[7] most philosophers had viewed scientific explanation as stating regularities, but not identifying causes.[2] To replace the covering law model's inductive-statistical model (IS model), Salmon introduced the statistical-relevance model (SR model),[8] and proposed the requirement of strict maximal specificity to supplement the covering law model's other component, the deductive-nomological model (DN model).[9] Yet ultimately, Salmon held statistical models to be but early stages, and lawlike regularities to be insufficient, in scientific explanation.[8] Salmon proposed that scientific explanation's manner is actually causal/mechanical explanation.[2][8]
NYT
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Lugar
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Fetzer2000p129
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).