For several decades now philosophers have discussed apparent examples of internally inconsistent scientific theories. However, there is still much controversy over how exactly we should conceive of scientific theories in the first place. Here I argue for a new approach, whereby all of the truly important questions about inconsistency in science can be asked and answered without disagreements about theories and theory-content getting in the way. Three examples commonly described as ‘internally inconsistent theories’ are analysed in the light of this approach. In the process, the question ‘Is the theory inconsistent or not?’ is identified as a bad, or at least unimportant, question
Philosophical discussions of disagreement typically focus on cases in which the disagreeing agents a...
Inconsistency toleration is the phenomenon of working with inconsistent information without threaten...
How exactly does the much-discussed inconsistency in Bohr's theory of the atom manifest itself? A cl...
There has always been interest in inconsistency in science, not least within science itself as scien...
In recent years philosophers of science have urged that many scientific theories are extremely usefu...
The philosopher of science faces overwhelming disagreement in the literature on the definition, natu...
This paper deals with a relatively recent trend in the history of analytic philosophy, philosophical...
A theory can be regarded, in the abstract, as a set of propositions. If there are circumstances, ...
I erect a framework within the semantic view of theories for explaining the empirical success of int...
This paper follows up a debate as to the consistency of Newtonian cosmology. Whereas Malament [(1995...
The semantic approach to scientific representation is now long established as a favourite amongst ph...
This paper discusses the logical possibility of testing inconsistent empirical theories. The main ch...
Scientific theories are accepted or rejected in terms of their observable predictions. If the predic...
How should we proceed if we find ourselves with good reason to believe conflicting theses? We have a...
This paper follows up a debate as to the consistency of Newtonian cosmology. Whereas Malament (1995)...
Philosophical discussions of disagreement typically focus on cases in which the disagreeing agents a...
Inconsistency toleration is the phenomenon of working with inconsistent information without threaten...
How exactly does the much-discussed inconsistency in Bohr's theory of the atom manifest itself? A cl...
There has always been interest in inconsistency in science, not least within science itself as scien...
In recent years philosophers of science have urged that many scientific theories are extremely usefu...
The philosopher of science faces overwhelming disagreement in the literature on the definition, natu...
This paper deals with a relatively recent trend in the history of analytic philosophy, philosophical...
A theory can be regarded, in the abstract, as a set of propositions. If there are circumstances, ...
I erect a framework within the semantic view of theories for explaining the empirical success of int...
This paper follows up a debate as to the consistency of Newtonian cosmology. Whereas Malament [(1995...
The semantic approach to scientific representation is now long established as a favourite amongst ph...
This paper discusses the logical possibility of testing inconsistent empirical theories. The main ch...
Scientific theories are accepted or rejected in terms of their observable predictions. If the predic...
How should we proceed if we find ourselves with good reason to believe conflicting theses? We have a...
This paper follows up a debate as to the consistency of Newtonian cosmology. Whereas Malament (1995)...
Philosophical discussions of disagreement typically focus on cases in which the disagreeing agents a...
Inconsistency toleration is the phenomenon of working with inconsistent information without threaten...
How exactly does the much-discussed inconsistency in Bohr's theory of the atom manifest itself? A cl...