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John T. Roberts presents and defends a radically new theory of laws
of nature, the Measurability Account. Though consistent with a
Humean ontology, Roberts's theory differs sharply from the most
influential Humean theory of laws, David Lewis's Best-System
Analysis. Unlike other Humean theories, the Measurability Account
affirms that there is an important sense in which the laws govern
the universe, rather than simply describing it economically. Yet
unlike non-Humean theories, it requires only minimal metaphysical
commitments. In this way, it combines the advantages of Humean and
non-Humean approaches to laws, while avoiding the pitfalls of each.
At the heart of the Measurability Account are two new ideas: that
lawhood is not a property of facts but rather a role that a
proposition can play within a scientific theory, and that what is
essential to laws is that they guarantee the reliability of methods
of measuring natural quantities. On the basis of these ideas,
Roberts argues that we can offer an informative and compelling
explanation of why laws have the peculiar counterfactual resilience
that sets them apart from accidental uniformities.
John T. Roberts presents and defends a radically new theory of laws
of nature, the Measurability Account. Though consistent with a
Humean ontology, Roberts's theory differs sharply from the most
influential Humean theory of laws, David Lewis's Best-System
Analysis. Unlike other Humean theories, the Measurability Account
affirms that there is an important sense in which the laws govern
the universe, rather than simply describing it economically. Yet
unlike non-Humean theories, it requires only minimal metaphysical
commitments. In this way, it combines the advantages of Humean and
non-Humean approaches to laws, while avoiding the pitfalls of each.
At the heart of the Measurability Account are two new ideas: that
lawhood is not a property of facts but rather a role that a
proposition can play within a scientific theory, and that what is
essential to laws is that they guarantee the reliability of methods
of measuring natural quantities. On the basis of these ideas,
Roberts argues that we can offer an informative and compelling
explanation of why laws have the peculiar counterfactual resilience
that sets them apart from accidental uniformities.
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