•  65
    Escaping the Fundamental Dichotomy of Scientific Realism
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 74 (4): 999-1025. 2023.
    The central motivation behind the scientific realism debate is explaining the impressive success of scientific theories. The debate has been dominated by two rival types of explanations: the first relies on some sort of static, referentially transparent relationship between the theory and the unobservable world, such as truthlikeness, representation, or structural similarity; the second relies on no robust relationship between the theory and unobservable reality at all, and instead draws on pred…Read more
  •  64
    The incongruent correspondence: Seven non-classical years of old quantum theory
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 46 (2): 239-246. 2014.
    The Correspondence Principle of old quantum theory is commonly considered to be the requirement that quantum and classical theories converge in their empirical predictions in the appropriate asymptotic limit. That perception has persisted despite the fact that Bohr and other early proponents of CP clearly did not intend it as a mere requirement, and despite much recent historical work. In this paper, I build on this work by first giving an explicit formulation to the mentioned asymptotic require…Read more
  •  46
    Physical Theories are Prescriptions, not Descriptions
    Erkenntnis 88 (5): 1825-1853. 2023.
    Virtually all philosophers of science have construed fundamental theories as descriptions of entities, properties, and/or structures. Call this the “descriptive-ontological” view. I argue that this view is incorrect, at least insofar as physical theories are concerned. I propose a novel construal of theories that I call the “prescriptive-dynamical” view. The central tenet of this view, roughly put, is that the _essential_ content of fundamental physical theories is a _prescription for interfacin…Read more