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Single Idea 14389

[filed under theme 14. Science / D. Explanation / 3. Best Explanation / b. Ultimate explanation ]

Full Idea

I see nothing metaphysically wrong in an infinite ontological regress of mechanisms and regularities.

Gist of Idea

There is nothing wrong with an infinite regress of mechanisms and regularities

Source

Bert Leuridan (Can Mechanisms Replace Laws of Nature? [2010], §5)

Book Ref

-: 'Philosophy of Science' [-], p.22


A Reaction

This is a pretty unusual view, and I can't accept it. My revulsion at this regress is precisely the reason why I believe in powers, as the bottom level of explanation.


The 11 ideas from 'Can Mechanisms Replace Laws of Nature?'

Mechanisms can't explain on their own, as their models rest on pragmatic regularities [Leuridan]
We can show that regularities and pragmatic laws are more basic than mechanisms [Leuridan]
Pragmatic laws allow prediction and explanation, to the extent that reality is stable [Leuridan]
A 'law of nature' is just a regularity, not some entity that causes the regularity [Leuridan]
Strict regularities are rarely discovered in life sciences [Leuridan]
Rather than dispositions, functions may be the element that brought a thing into existence [Leuridan]
Mechanisms are ontologically dependent on regularities [Leuridan]
Biological functions are explained by disposition, or by causal role [Leuridan]
Generalisations must be invariant to explain anything [Leuridan]
Mechanisms must produce macro-level regularities, but that needs micro-level regularities [Leuridan]
There is nothing wrong with an infinite regress of mechanisms and regularities [Leuridan]