Dear Cambridge philosophers of Science,

Tomorrow (Wednesday, today as most of you read this) is the third 
meeting for CamPoS, which happens as usual at 1 p.m. in the HPS 
department in seminar room 2 in the basement.  Sam Fletcher from 
Minnesota will present 'The Principle of Stability'.  His abstract is 
below.

Sincerely,
J. Brian Pitts

Abstract: How can inferences from idealized models to the phenomena they 
represent be justified when those models deliberately distort the 
phenomena?  Pierre Duhem considered just this problem, arguing that 
inferences and explanations from mathematical models of phenomena to 
real physical applications must also be demonstrated to be approximately 
correct when the (idealized) assumptions of the model are only 
approximately true.  Despite being little discussed among philosophers, 
mathematicians and physicists both contemporaneous with and subsequent 
to Duhem took up this challenge (if only sometimes implicitly), yielding 
a novel and rich mathematical theory of stability with epistemological 
consequences.


-- 
J. Brian Pitts
Senior Research Associate
Faculty of Philosophy
University of Cambridge
jb...@cam.ac.uk

Ph.D., Philosophy/History & Philosophy of Science, University of Notre 
Dame
Ph.D., Physics, University of Texas at Austin


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