The Ignis Fatuus of Reduction and Unification

Back to the Rough Ground

  • BRAKEL, J. VAN
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 988:p 30-43, 2003.

Given the enormous variety of possible intertheoretical relations, the proliferation of definitions of reduction, supervenience, emergence, unification, and so on, as well as the fact that empirical studies have provided support for almost any metaphysical option or, alternatively, have shown rather conclusively that empirically the case is inconclusive, I suggest a moratorium on the use of words such as "reduction," "supervenience," and "unification" and to go back to the rough ground and give perspicuous renderings of the practice of chemistry. What is needed are very detailed case studies and further discussions about them, instead of bickering about whether chemistry can be reduced to physics, supervenes on it, can be unified with it, and similar "metaphysical" concerns.

Copyright © 2003 by the New York Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
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