Deutsche Gesellschaft
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236301

A tale of two methods

Eric Winsberg

pp. 575-592

Abstrakt

Simulations (both digital and analog) and experiments share many features. But what essential features distinguish them? I discuss two proposals in the literature. On one proposal, experiments investigate nature directly, while simulations merely investigate models. On another proposal, simulations differ from experiments in that simulationists manipulate objects that bear only a formal (rather than material) similarity to the targets of their investigations. Both of these proposals are rejected. I argue that simulations fundamentally differ from experiments with regard to the background knowledge that is invoked to argue for the “external validity” of the investigation.

Publication details

Published in:

Frigg Roman, Hartmann Stephan, Imbert Cyrille (2009) Models and simulations. Synthese 169 (3).

Seiten: 575-592

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-008-9437-0

Referenz:

Winsberg Eric (2009) „A tale of two methods“. Synthese 169 (3), 575–592.