Truth or Consequences? Generative versus Consequential Justification in Science

PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1988:393 - 405 (1988)
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Abstract

Pure consequentialists hold that all theoretical justification derives from testing the consequences of hypotheses, while generativists maintain that reasoning (some feature of) the hypothesis from we already know is an important form of justification. The strongest form of justification (they claim) is an idealized discovery argument. In the guise of H-D methodology, consequentialism is widely supposed to have defeated generativism during the 19th century. I argue that novel prediction fails to overcome the logical weakness of consequentialism or to render generative methodology superfluous. Specifically, Bayesian consequentialism is not an alternative to generativism but reduces to an instance of it.

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Thomas Nickles
University of Nevada, Reno

Citations of this work

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