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Analogy

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Analogy John D. Norton Department of History and Philosophy of Science Center for Philosophy of Science University of Pittsburgh Background Puzzle * What powers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Analogy


1
Analogy
John D. Norton Department of History and
Philosophy of Science Center for Philosophy of
Science University of Pittsburgh

2
Background Puzzle
What powers analogical inference?
Things similar in other properties.
Things similar in some properties.
Is there a Principle of Similarity in nature?

3
Formal Approach to Inductive Inference

4
Bare Analogy
S1 is P. S2 resembles S1 in being
M. ---------------------------------- therefore
S2 is P. (Joyce, 1936)
A fixture in traditional accounts of logic back
to Aristotle.

5
Doubts
Merely bad luck for a good inference form? Or
There is no way in which we can really assure
ourselves that we are arguing safely by analogy.
The only rule that can be given is this, that the
more closely two things resemble each other, the
more likely it is that they are the same in other
respects, especially in points closely connected
with those observed . In order to be clear
about our conclusions, we ought in fact never to
rest satisfied with mere analogy, but ought to
try to discover the general laws governing the
case. William Stanley Jevons, 1879.

6
Two-Dimensional Account
Mary B. Hesse, Models and Analogies in Science.
(1966)
Source
Target
Barthas synopsis
Property P
Property P
Property A
Property not-A
Property not-B
Property B
Property Q
Property Q

7
Two-Dimensional Account
Mary B. Hesse, Models and Analogies in Science.
(1966)
Source
Target
Property P
Property P
Property A
Property not-A
Property not-B
Property B
Property Q
Property Q

8
The Articulation Model
Paul Bartha, By Parallel Reasoning The
Construction and Evaluation of Analogical
Arguments. (2010)
Source
Target
Property P
Property P
Property A
Property not-A
Property not-B
Property B
Property Q
Property Q is plausible.

9
MaterialApproach to Inductive Inference

10
Philosophers
Analogy is a part of the theory of inference. It
is investigated by seeking general formal rules.
but no complete formal scheme has been found.
so what has inference got to do with analogy?

11
Formal Theory of Induction
Material Theory of Induction
versus
Inductive inferences are licensed by facts
"material postulate".
  • Inductive inferences are licensed by formal
    schema.

12
Deductive inference the model for a formal theory
The mome raths were outgrabe.
All mimsy were the borogroves.
or
Either
The mome raths were NOT outgrabe.
All mimsy were the borogroves.
Therefore

13
Inductive inference
This crystal of radium chloride is monoclinic.
This crystal of radium chloride is less than 1mm
in size.
All crystals of radium chloride are less than 1mm
in size.
All crystals of radium chloride are monoclinic.

14
Material Theory of Induction applied to Analogy
Analogical inference is powered by local facts,
peculiar to each instance.
Warranting fact is the fact of analogy
investigated by the scientist.

15
Case Studies
All three turn out to be demonstrative
inductions! Inductive risk taken in accepting
fact of analogy.
Fact of analogy
Inference
Galileo and the mountains of the moon
There are mountains and valleys on the moon. The
mountains are up to 4 miles high.
Darknesses on moon due to prominences obstructing
linearly propagating sunlight, similar to shadows
on earth.
Reynolds analogy
The mechanism of momentum and heat transfer the
same. Rates are proportional. Stanton friction
factor/8
From rates of momentum transport (pressure drop)
to rates of heat transport.
Liquid drop model of the nucleus
Energy term in (nucleon number)2/3. Excitation
modes match classical liquid drop.
Which nuclei are stable. (OK) Energy of nuclear
excitations. (poor)

16
The End
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