The goal of this paper is to outline and defend an empiricist metaphysics of laws of nature. The key empiricist idea is that there are regularities without regularity-enforcers. Differently put, there are natural laws without law-makers of a distinct metaphysical kind. This outline relies on the concept of a 'natural pattern' and more significantly on the existence of a network of natural patterns in nature. The relation between a regularity and a pattern will be analysed in terms of mereology. Here is the road map. In section 2, I briefly discuss the relation between empiricism and metaphysics, aiming to show that an empiricist metaphysics is possible. In section 3, I offer arguments against stronger metaphysical views of laws. Then, in section 4, I motivate nomic objectivism. In section 5, I address the question 'what is a regularity?' and develop a novel answer to it, based on the notion of a pattern. In section 6, I analyse the notion of pattern and in section 7 I raise the question: 'what is a law of nature?', the answer to which is: a law of nature is a regularity that is characterised by the unity of a natural pattern.
CITATION STYLE
Psillos, S. (2014). Regularities, natural patterns and laws of nature. In Theoria (Spain) (Vol. 29, pp. 9–27). https://doi.org/10.1387/theoria.8991
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