Abstract
In their recent “A modest defense of manifestationalism” (2015), Asay
and Bordner defend this position from a quite famous criticism put forward
by Rosen (1994), according to which while manifestationalism
can be seen as more compatible with the letter of empiricism than other
popular stances, such as constructive empiricism, it fails nonetheless to
make sense of science. The two authors reckon that Rosen’s argument is
actually flawed. In their view, manifestationalism could in fact represent a
legitimate thesis about the nature of scientific inquiry. In this paper, I will
show that Asay and Bordner’s criticisms to Rosen are actually off target.
Moreover, they rest upon an understanding of what the aim of science is
that might serve to their purposes, but that does not seem to be in line
with the scientific enterprise. Perhaps constructive empiricism still represents
the best compromise so far presented between strict empiricism and
the acknowledgment of the rationality of science.