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E-book
Author Achinstein, Peter

Title Particles and Waves : Historical Essays in the Philosophy of Science
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1991

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Description 1 online resource (346 pages)
Contents General Introduction; Part I: Theories of Light: Particles versus Waves; 1. Introduction; 2. Newton's Corpuscular Query and Experimental Philosophy; 3. Light Hypotheses; 4. Hypotheses, Probability, and Waves; Part II: Maxwell and the Kinetic Theory of Gases; 5. Introduction; 6. Theoretical Derivations; 7. Maxwell's Analogies and Kinetic Theory; 8. Scientific Discovery and Maxwell's Kinetic Theory; 9. The Only Game in Town; Part III: Cathode Rays and the Electron; 10. Introduction; 11. Theory, Experiment, and Cathode Rays; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R
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Summary This volume contains six published and two new essays, focusing on philosophical problems surrounding the postulation of unobservable entities such as light waves, molecules and electrons
This volume brings together six published and two new essays by the noted philosopher of science, Peter Achinstein. It represents the culmination of his examination of methodological issues that arise in nineteenth-century physics. He focuses on the philosophical problem of how, if at all, it is possible to confirm scientific hypotheses that postulate ̀unobservables' such as light waves, molecules, and electrons. This question is one that not only was of great interest to nineteenth-century physicists and methodologists, but continues to occupy philosophers of science up to the present day. The essays in this volume deal with this vexing problem as it arose in actual scientific practice in three nineteenth-century episodes: the debate between particle and wave theorists of light, Maxwell's kinetic theory of gases, and J.J. Thomson's discovery of the electron. Achinstein shows that the most important issue raised by these three cases concerns the legitimacy of introducing hypotheses that invoke "unobservables". If science is to be empirical, can such hypotheses be employed? How, if at all, is it possible to confirm them? Achinstein here assesses the philosophical validity of nineteenth-century and modern answers to these questions and presents and defends his own solutions
Notes Print version record
Subject Science -- Philosophy -- History
Physics -- Methodology -- History
Wave-particle duality -- History
Physics -- Methodology
Science -- Philosophy
Wave-particle duality
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780195345056
0195345053