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PARTIAL REVIEW OF HINTIKKA AND HALONEN TOWARD A THEORY OF THE PROCESS
OF EXPLANATION
The covering laws are normally different for different explananda.
But if each particular explanation would involve a separate quest of a
covering law, these laws would likewise be multiplied without necessity
and without reason.
This is similar with a sophism. Why is a law a covering law? Why such a
model is subsumptionist? Not because many different initial conditions
and explanandums are subsumed under a covering law? What explains
different explanandum under the same covering law are different initial
conditions.
In actual scientific practice, an explanation does not consist in
deriving the explanandum from a covering law plus suitable initial
conditions.
The actual scientific explanations from the domain of natural sciences
many times are very weak or imperfect from a logical criterion of
consideration. That is, they are not a model for the philosopher or the
logician of scientific explanation. Many times when we subsume a special
case under a general one we can talk of deduction or derivation, but if
the covering law or background theory has a causal form, if the covering
law or background theory has not a pure logical structure (only with
logical relations and operations etc.), then their deduction or
derivation is not a genuine one, is not a logical deduction or
derivation, but the representation of a causal or physical consequence.
Furthermore, of the covering laws relied on in explanations have the
same logical form as universal syllogistic premises, how do covering law
explanations differ from syllogistic explanations?
By content and aim. The valide explanation should have a valide logical
structure. Why there can be no scientific explanations that have a
syllogistic logical structure?
THE PARTIAL REVIEW OF HINTIKKA AND HALONEN TOWARD A THEORY OF THE
PROCESS OF EXPLANATION
Instead, Hertz started from something that is not typically emphasized
or even mentioned in covering law accounts of explanation.
It is what we have called the background theory.
In Hertz’s case, it consists of Maxwell’s equations.
From them Hertz deduced
how wave-like electromagnetic disturbances are propagated.
You see, somebody deduced something from equations. Equations contains
equalities quantities, addings, subtractings, fractions, multiplications
etc. of quantities, NOT TRUTH VALUES. The mathematical equality is a
quantitative equality. A pure equation has a pure mathematical
structure, not a logical one. Having a mathematical structure it cannot
substantiate a deduction, cause the deduction has logical nature.
Conclusion: The mathematical consequences should be distinguished from
the logical ones.
"nu ma lasa sa...plec"
Scientific laws, but alone theories, are rarely of the form of a general
implication.
Scientific theories are rarely in a pure logical form. That is why,
together with the ad explanandum and explanandum they do not form a
valide logical structure.
However, the gist of Hertz’s explanation did not consist in the
deduction of the explanandum from the propagation law (plus initial
conditions).
Philosophy of science is not history of science. Philosophers of science
are not interested of the individuality of a scientific explanation. An
individual scientific explanation can be a very wrong model. We are
interested by the most intelligent, rational,
adaptable, economic, pure,
and perfect (necessary and suficient) model of the scientific
explanation.
A Regulative Ideal. We are not slavers of science... We should something
to lead. We should propose the most rational, valide, economic, and
intelligible model. Economic and intelligible to be very practicable.
Valide to lead at truth. PARTIAL REVIEW OF HINTIKKA AND HALONEN
EXPLANATION:
RETROSPECTIVE REFLECTIONS
The explanatoriness of an explanation does not come from the background
theory, but from the connection between A, T and D that the explanatory
interpolation theorem brings out.
The authors T is a background theory. That is, T can be a physical
theory, a physical conditional, a causal generality. For instance, if
salt is put in water, then it will undergo dissolvation or W(s) D(s).
Now, this consequence can be necessary but is not a logical consequence.
That is, it is not a necessary consequence of a logical structure as a
is a logical consequence of the logical structure (a&b). That is, the
authors mixes the logic with physics, they do not observed that if T is
physical conditional and A would be the antecendent condition, then D
would be a causal consequence, not a logical consequence. T should
transformed and reconstructed until will become a logical truth or a
logical implication and only then, if A constitute the antecedent of the
logical implication, D will follow as a logical consequence. The authors
suposse logical dependencies between T, A, and D, but if T is not
transformed, if T is only a causal conditional, then the relations
between T, A, and D represent only causal or universal physical
dependencies not logical implications.
PARTIAL REVIEW OF HINTIKKA&HALLONEN S EXPLANATION AS INTERPOLATION
A suitable interpolation formula I explains why G follows
from F by showing how the structures specified by F interact with the
structures specified by G
so as to make the consequence inevitable.
...
In the general theory of explanation the interpolation theorem can thus
be used insofar as the explanation of an event, say one described by E,
can be thought of as depending on two different things,
on the one hand on some given background theory and on the other hand on
contingent ad hoc facts concerning the circumstances of E.
...
Both the background theory and the contingent “initial conditionsâ€Â
specify a kind of structure.
An explanation is an account of the interplay:interdependenta
between these two structures.
In explaining some particular event, say that P(b), we have
available to us some background theory T and certain facts A about the
circumstances of the
explanandum.
The process of explanation will then consist of deducing the explanandum
from T & A.
We see the authors pretend that to explain D is to deduce it from T&A:
(T&A) has as a logical necessary consequence D. But T is not
infrastructured. Now, this is
the form of the actual scientific explanations or their ideal? Consider
the explanation of aging in gerontology. Is there applied the authors
model of explanation. They require only one background theory, but for
the explanation of aging were proposed hundreds of theories (see
Medvede s An attempt at a rational clasification of theories of aging,
Biol. Rev., 65, 375-398, 1990).
Most scientists consider that aging is,
not as phenomenon, a result of a multiple caused process. Most of the
theories of aging, if not all, have a causal form.
Idealized a causal theory can have the form: A causes B. But the things
are very complex in the explanation of aging. There are there long
causal chains in wich an effect can become a cause for other effect.
Moreovere, syncronicaly can act many causes. The evolution of the
process that result in aging is very complex. Not an animal, but even
the changes of the life of a single cell were not described and
interpreted by the serious scientists. To explain the advancement of the
aging process or time is a very hard thing which cannot be reduced at
the simple deduction of a D from (T&A). But, however, if we separe from
the whole process only an atomic gerontological
explanation, but what in gerontology is "atomic" in physics can be very
"molecular", then we will have there only a theory T and maybe some
conditions A, then this atomic explanation will have the form of
authors explanation. Suposse that T has the form A causes B (e.g., If
the cell s telomeres undergo the changing x, then the cell loss its
replicative capacity). Is this logic? Suposse another exemple, Salt
decomposes in liquid water, that is, if salt is put in liquit water,
then it will undergo decomposition. The consequence is necessary, but is
this logic? The consequence is logical or causal, physical? The
consequence is in thanks to the logical structure? Can F(x) be logicaly
true or false? No. We saw a causal conditional or consequence. There can
be
physical or causal necessary concesequences and necessary consequences
of certain logical structure (eg., if (a&b), then a).
Now, the authors writed that (T&A) has as a logical consequence D, but
their T can be a causal background theory or a physical theory, not a
logical truth. But if T is a causal or physical conditional then the
addition of A will substantiate only a causal or physical consequence
not a logical one. The authors left T in its physical structure, but if
T is not transformed or reconstructed
in a logical truth or logical implication, then (T&A) has not as logical
consequence D. And indeed their T is not infrastructured logicaly. The
authors confuse a physical (causal)necessary consequence with a logical
necessary consequence. Moreover, they apply the Craig s theorem to the
first-order of logic of predicate, but F(x) or G(x) cannot be neither
true nor false logicaly.
THE IMPERFECTION OF CRAIG S THEOREM?
It is ultra clear that, the author of Explanation as Interpolation
relies or at least start form Craig s interpolation theorem, but is this
theorem perfect?
The author reproduces Craig s theorem in the following way:
Assume that F and G are (ordinary) first-rder formulas, and assume that
(i) F_G
(ii) not _~F
(iii) not _ G
Then there exists a formula I (called interpolation formula) such that
(a) F _ I
(b) I _ G
(c) The nonlogical constants and free individual variables of I occur
both in F and in G.
Now, consider the following case:
F = (a & b). G = (a V b). It is clear that F _ G, but what is the
interpolation FORMULA here? Is ~(~a V ~b) or other equivalent
transformation of F different from F? This transformations are
equivalents because, finaly, they, though that are different
descriptions, have the same sense. If "I" should be realy different from
F, then we can deduce from F either a or b, that is, parts of F. And,
then, indeed, by extension, a implies (a V b), that is, G. But neither a
nor b are formulas, but are constants.
Conclusion: interpolation should not be necessarily a FORMULA, though
that the theorem says that there exists a formula I...
The theorem was not perfect. F(x) cannot be neither true nor false
logicaly, that is due its logical structure.
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