Narratives, or constructing storylines, serve important cognitive functions in life and historical studies. A growing interest lies in their roles in generating and structuring frontier scientific knowledge. Philosophers of science characterize narratives as a “technology of sense-making,” as they connect diverse scientific elements from different sources to create a coherent understanding. Distinctive features of narratives lead to both appreciation and criticism. Because narratives can be loos…
Read moreNarratives, or constructing storylines, serve important cognitive functions in life and historical studies. A growing interest lies in their roles in generating and structuring frontier scientific knowledge. Philosophers of science characterize narratives as a “technology of sense-making,” as they connect diverse scientific elements from different sources to create a coherent understanding. Distinctive features of narratives lead to both appreciation and criticism. Because narratives can be loose in organization and connect gappy materials, they empower the study of complex phenomena. However, they are also criticized for generating “just-so” stories, which, without being verified with other established scientific methods, are not useful to science.
I defend the central role of narratives in science, focusing on cases in astronomy. Astronomy has achieved remarkable progress in the last century despite theoretical and empirical challenges. Philosophy of science needs to explain how knowledge about the universe’s unobservable past can be reliably obtained. I argue that narrative construction is a key solution. Specifically, I argue that unverified narratives can still provide a special kind of knowledge for science, the knowledge about how to use certain scientific tools.
I demonstrate this by showing how constructing coherent narratives makes astronomers develop three key tools for productive research. First, narratives enable the establishment of time measurement methods in the universe. Second, in astronomers’ first account of the exoplanet Hot Jupiter, constructing a narrative for its orbital migration suggested the novel use of existing models and produced a toolkit for studying similar phenomena. Third, when astronomers integrate a data-driven method, machine learning, into research, narratives mitigate its uncertainties and adapt it for solving problems about the Galaxy’s past.
To conclude, my dissertation demonstrates narratives’ power as a meta-method for science. This also helps to understand important discoveries in 20th-21st-century astronomy and provides lessons for its continuing success.