This thesis explores the conceptual foundations of black hole physics through two interconnected aims. First, drawing on philosophical work on scientific modeling, explanation, and idealization, I elucidate the mathematical and methodological bases of black hole physics, thereby clarifying the physical significance of black holes across various theoretical contexts. Second, by examining physicists’ attempts to understand black holes, I critically engage with ongoing debates in the philosophy of …
Read moreThis thesis explores the conceptual foundations of black hole physics through two interconnected aims. First, drawing on philosophical work on scientific modeling, explanation, and idealization, I elucidate the mathematical and methodological bases of black hole physics, thereby clarifying the physical significance of black holes across various theoretical contexts. Second, by examining physicists’ attempts to understand black holes, I critically engage with ongoing debates in the philosophy of science. I argue that black holes are physically robust and indispensable entities, serving as crucial junctions between gravity, quantum physics, and thermodynamics.
Chapter 2 identifies three primary but different approaches to modeling classical black holes: exact solutions, topological-causal analyses, and the initial-value formulation. I argue that the distinct mathematical techniques in each of these approaches are mutually integrable and jointly support the physical significance of black holes—in particular, among other things, in substantiating the final state conjecture, which posits that Kerr-Newman family of solutions represent possible end states of gravitational collapse.
In Chapter 3, building on these idealized black hole models, I offer a nuanced account of scientific idealization and de-idealization. In light of asymptotic methods, I propose a tripartite framework for de-idealizing de-idealization: intra-model, inter-model, and measurement de-idealizations. These, in turn, reveal how the three main modeling strategies de-idealize black hole models in productive and interrelated ways.
Chapter 4 addresses the philosophical notion of universality, prompted by Chandrasekhar’s view of black holes as the simplest and most perfect macroscopic objects in the universe. I identify three complementary forms of black hole universality. I argue that explaining black hole universality requires both (1) the abstract, mathematical operation (idealization) used in topological proofs of uniqueness theorems and (2) the dynamical and causal details revealed in stability theorems. The latter justifies and de-idealizes the former, countering the claim that there are always essential and ineliminable idealizations in universality explanation.
The final chapter reinforces the physical status of black holes by analyzing black hole thermodynamics. I focus on the frameworks of quasi-local horizons, particularly isolated and dynamical horizons, arguing that they provide a more solid physical foundation for black hole thermodynamics than traditional arguments based on event horizons.