Abstract
Philosophy of science attempts to describe all parts of the scientific process in a general way in order to facilitate the description, execution and improvements of this process. So far, all proposed philosophies have only covered existing processes and disciplines partially and imperfectly. In particular logical approaches have always received a lot of attention due to attempts to fundamentally address issues with the definition of science as a discipline with reductionist theories. We propose a new way to approach the problem from the perspective of computational complexity and argue why this approach may be better than previous propositions based on pure logic and mathematics.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Thagard, P., & Skiff, P. (1989). Computational Philosophy of Science. Computers in Physics, 3(6), 96–97. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4822883
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