Abstract and Concrete

In Nature's capacities and their measurement. New York: Oxford University Press (1989)
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Abstract

Modern science relies heavily on Galilean idealization, which establishes ceteris paribus laws—laws about what happens when a factor operates unimpeded. But these laws are of little direct use since factors seldom do operate unimpeded. The follow‐up to Galilean idealization is abstraction—we talk simply of what the factor does. The best way to understand this abstraction is as an ascription of a capacity, not in terms of any kind of laws. Even the process of ‘de‐idealization’ or of ‘concretization’ that results in a concrete phenomenological law inevitably involves further concepts in the capacity family.

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