Reconstructing Bhaskar's Transcendental Analysis of Experimental Activity
Keywords
Philosophy; Philosophy of ScienceOntology; Causality; Science; Experiment; Critical Realism; Bhaskar
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In this essay I attempt a thorough reconstruction and modification of Roy Bhaskar's "transcendental analysis of experimental activity" to show that this analysis contains a powerful critique of regularity theories of causal laws and a strong case for a transcendental realist, powers-based theory of causal laws. Despite the short and scattered places in which this analysis occurs in Bhaskar's texts, my reconstruction synthesizes these textual resources to formulate a unified analysis of experimentation that derives three distinct conclusions from four presuppositions and a complex of transcendental arguments. These conclusions are: 1) Extra-experimental reality is, to a significant extent, an open system, 2) Causal laws must be distinguished from constant conjunctions of events, and 3) Causal laws are the transcendentally real tendencies of generative mechanisms.Date
2012-05-03Type
Peer-reviewed ArticleIdentifier
oai:ojs.cosmosandhistory.org:article/223http://www.cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/article/view/223