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The Epistemology of a Spectrometer
S-CAR Journal Article
Daniel Rothbart
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Professor of Conflict Analysis and Resolution; Co-Director, Program for the Prevention of Mass Violence
Qualification:
Ph.D., Philosophy, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
M.A., Philosophy, State University of New York at Binghamton
Awards and Honor:
The Epistemology of a Spectrometer
Volume: 61
Issue: 1
ISSN: 00318248
Abstract
Contrary to the assumptions of empiricist philosophies of science, the theory-laden character of data will not imply the inherent failure (subjectivity, circularity, or rationalization) of instruments to expose nature's secrets. The success of instruments is credited to scientists' capacity to create artificial technological analogs to familiar physical systems. The design of absorption spectrometers illustrates the point: Progress in designing many modern instruments is generated by analogically projecting theoretical insights from known physical systems to unknown terrain. An experimental realism is defended.
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