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Single Idea 5475

[from 'The Philosophy of Nature: new essentialism' by Brian Ellis, in 26. Natural Theory / D. Laws of Nature / 1. Laws of Nature ]

Full Idea

There are four major problems about the laws of nature: a necessity problem (must they be true?), an idealisation problem (why is this preferable?), an ontological problem (their grounds), and a structural problem (their relationships).

Gist of Idea

We must explain the necessity, idealisation, ontology and structure of natural laws

Source

Brian Ellis (The Philosophy of Nature: new essentialism [2002], Ch.5)

Book Reference

Ellis,Brian: 'The Philosophy of Nature: new essentialism' [Acumen 2002], p.92


A Reaction

One might also ask why the laws (or their underlying essences) are the way they are, and not some other way, though the prospects of answering that don't look good. I don't think we should be satisfied with saying all of these questions are hopeless.