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Nagel's analysis of reduction: Comments in defense as well as critique
Authors:Paul Needham
Institution:1. Department of Physics, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea;2. Center for Quantum Space Time, Sogang University, Seoul, Korea;3. Department of Physics and Photon Science, School of Physics and Chemistry, GIST, Korea;4. Department of Physics and Center for High Energy Physics, Chung Yuan Christian University, Chung Li City, Taiwan;5. Leung Center for Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics, National Taiwan University, Taipei 106, Taiwan;1. DAMTP, University of Cambridge, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge CB3 0WA, UK;2. Laboratoire de Mathématiques et Physique Théorique, LMPT CNRS – UMR 7350, Université de Tours, Parc de Grandmont, 37200 Tours, France;3. Department of General Relativity and Gravitation, Institute of Physics, Kazan Federal University, Kremlevskaya street 18, 420008 Kazan, Russia
Abstract:Despite all the criticism showered on Nagel's classic account of reduction, it meets a fundamental desideratum in an analysis of reduction that is difficult to question, namely of providing for a proper identification of the reducing theory. This is not clearly accommodated in radically different accounts. However, the same feature leads me to question Nagel's claim that the reducing theory can be separated from the putative bridge laws, and thus to question his notion of heterogeneous reduction. A further corollary to the requirement that all the necessary conditions be incorporated in an adequate formulation of the putative reducing theory is that the standard example of gas temperature is not reducible to average molecular kinetic energy. As originally conceived, Nagel's conception of reduction takes no account of approximate reasoning and this failure has certainly restricted its applicability, perhaps to the point of making it unrealistic as a model of reduction in science. I suggest approximation can be accommodated by weakening the original requirement of deduction without jeopardizing the fundamental desideratum. Finally, I turn to briefly consider the idea sometimes raised of the ontological reducibility of chemistry.
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