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The epistemology of hedged laws
Authors:Robert Kowalenko
Institution:Department of Philosophy, School of Social Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, WITS 2050, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:Standard objections to the notion of a hedged, or ceteris paribus, law of nature usually boil down to the claim that such laws would be either (1) irredeemably vague, (2) untestable, (3) vacuous, (4) false, or a combination thereof. Using epidemiological studies in nutrition science as an example, I show that this is not true of the hedged law-like generalizations derived from data models used to interpret large and varied sets of empirical observations. Although it may be ‘in principle impossible’ to construct models that explicitly identify all potential causal interferers with the relevant generalization, the view that our failure to do so is fatal to the very notion of a cp-law is plausible only if one illicitly infers metaphysical impossibility from epistemic impossibility. I close with the suggestion that a model-theoretic approach to cp-laws poses a problem for recent attempts to formulate a Mill–Ramsey–Lewis theory of cp-laws.
Keywords:Ceteris paribus laws  Methodology  Laws of nature  Modeling  Multivariate regression  Mill&ndash  Ramsey&ndash  Lewis  Epidemiology  Nutrition  Nuts
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