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Forces and Fields by Mary Hesse is a history of physics surrounding
the question: How do bodies act on one another across space? Hesse
illustrates this through various answers, discussing period of
transition in fundamental physics in which new concepts and ideas
have been introduced and made scientifically testable, and makes a
certain philosophical interpretation of science from the beginning.
Some topics include the logical status of theories, primitive
analogies, mechanism in Greek science, the Greek inheritance,
Corpuscular Philosophy, The Theory of Gravitation and The Theory of
Relativity, as well as others. Mary B. Hesse (born 1924) was a
contemporary English philosopher of science. She is now professor
emerita of the philosophy of science at Cambridge University. Her
publication Models and Analogies in Science is a widely cited and
accessible introduction to the topic. Hesse argues, contra Duhem,
that models and analogies are integral to understanding scientific
practice in general and scientific advancement in particular,
especially how the domain of a scientific theory is extended and
how theories generate genuinely novel predictions. Examples of such
models include the famous billiard ball model of the dynamical
theory of gases and models of light based on analogies to sound and
water waves. Hesse thinks that, in order help us understand a new
system or phenomenon, we will often create an analogical model that
compares this new system or phenomenon with a more familiar system
or phenomenon. In her book, Hesse makes a distinction between three
types of analogues in scientific models: positive analogies,
negative analogies, and neutral analogies. Positive analogies are
those features which are known or thought to be shared by both
systems, negative analogies are those features which are known or
thought to be present in one system but absent in the other, and
neutral analogies are those features whose status as positive or
negative analogies is uncertain at present. Neutral analogies are
by far the most interesting of the three types of analogies, for
they suggest ways to test the limits of our models, guiding the way
for scientific advancement. In the late 19th century, for example,
the idea that light-waves have a physical medium called the
luminiferous ether would have been best thought of as a neutral
analogy with water and sound waves. Eventually, due to a null
result in the Michelson-Morley and Trouton-Noble experiments, as
well as other similar experiments, this analogy came to be accepted
as a negative analogy - we now accept that light has no physical
medium, unlike sound and water waves. The discovery of this
negative analogy led to further advancement, including the
unification of electro-magnetic theory with optics, and the
eventual creation of new and more informative models of light.
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