The intelligibility objection against underdetermination

Authors

  • Rogério Passos Severo Departamento de Filosofia Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/1808-1711.2012v16n1p121

Abstract

One of the objections against the thesis of underdetermination of theories by observations is that it is unintelligible. Any two empirically equivalent theories — so the argument goes—are in principle intertranslatable, hence cannot count as rivals in any non-trivial sense. Against that objection, this paper shows that empirically equivalent theories may contain theoretical sentences that are not intertranslatable. Examples are drawn from a related discussion about incommensurability that shows that theoretical non-intertranslatability is possible.

Published

2012-08-27

Issue

Section

Articles