Summary |
Humean Reductionism is the programme that, amongst other things, seeks to reduce nomic facts (including laws, dispositions, counterfactuals) to the total distribution of non-nomic/non-modal facts. Laws of nature are thereby not supposed to be eliminated (compare the section on Anti-Realism about laws, yet, they count as non-fundamental facts: There are laws because the world exhibits certain patterns and not vice-versa. There are multiple proposals to show how the Humean reduction of nomic to non-modal facts should be carried out, David Lewis’ Best System Analysis being the most influential one (versions of which have been proposed already by Mill and Ramsey: Suppose you knew all non-modal facts about the past, present, and future state of the universe and you organised your knowledge in various competing systematic summaries. A contingent generalisation is, then, a law of nature if and only if it appears as an axiom or theorem in the one system that achieves a far better combination of simplicity, strength and fit than any of the other competing systems. There are different versions of the Best System Analysis: The Better Best System Analysis proposed by Schrenk, Callender&Cohen, Loewer’s Package Deal Account of Laws, or the most recent pragmatist restatement of the Best System Approach by Jaag, Loew, Hicks or Dorst. |