Synthese 97 (2):161 - 181 (
1993)
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Abstract
Philosophers and historians of philosophy have come to recognize that
at the core of logical positivism was an attachment to prediction as the
necessary condition for scientific knowledge.1 The inheritors of their
tradition, especially the Bayesians among us, continue to seek a theory
of confirmation that reflects this epistemic commitment. The importance
of prediction in the growth of scientific knowledge is a commitment
I share with the positivists, so I do not blanch at that designation,
much less employ it as a term of abuse.
Precisely expressing and conclusively establishing the claims of prediction
as a necessary condition for certifying claims as increments of
knowledge is a goal that has so far eluded us post-positivists. Philosophers
know the problems well: defining a positive instance, distinguishing
projectible from nonprojectible predicates, deciding whether
retrodiction is as epistemically probative as prediction. 2 But I can't
help thinking that these problems are technicalities - important and
arresting, but not impediments to embracing the positivist demand
that increments in scientific knowledge withstand tests of predictive
success.