Abstract
A natural way to think of models is as abstract entities. If theories employ models to represent the world, theories traffic in abstract entities much more widely than is often assumed. This kind of thought seems to create a problem for a scientific realist approach to theories. Scientific realists claim theories should be understood literally. Do they then imply (and are they committed to) the reality of abstract entities? Or are theories simply—and incurably—false (if there are no abstract entities)? Or has the very idea of literal understanding to be abandoned? Is then fictionalism towards scientific theories inevitable? This paper argues that scientific realism can happily co-exist with models qua abstracta.
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A draft of this paper was presented at the conference Models & Simulations II, at the University of Tilburg, Holland in October 2007. Many thanks to a number of participants for comments, but especially to Roman Frigg, Chris Pincock and Mauricio Suarez. Many thanks are also due to Martin Jones for penetrating comments on an earlier draft and to an anonymous reader for Synthese.
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Psillos, S. Living with the abstract: realism and models. Synthese 180, 3–17 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-009-9563-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-009-9563-3