Abstract

Lewis’s original Best Systems Account of laws was not motivated much by pragmatics. But recent commentary on his general approach to laws has taken a ‘pragmatic turn’. This was initiated by Hall’s defence against the charge of ‘ratbag idealism’ which maintained that best systems accounts should be admired rather than criticised for the inherent pragmatism behind their choice of desiderata for what counts as ‘best’. Emboldened by Hall’s pragmatic turn, recent commentators have proposed the addition of pragmatically motivated desiderata to complement or replace the canonical desiderata of strength and simplicity. This, they hope, will allow their revisionary BSAs to respond better to various counterexamples against the original account. While the pragmatic turn itself is well taken, here I problematise these revisionary approaches. First, there are reasonable responses to the counterexamples from within the canonical BSA. Second, while actual laws may satisfy the newly proposed desiderata, there are reasons to think these desiderata cannot be constitutive of laws. By comparison, the canonical desiderata appear to be relevant to explaining why and when the revisionary desiderata will reflect pragmatic features of the laws and better reflect the motives behind practitioners of fundamental physics.

Highlights

  • Knowledge of the laws of nature confers upon us a great deal of practical ability

  • It has been repeatedly observed that the canonical or ‘official guiding idea’ behind the Best Systems Account (BSA) cannot alone account for many of the practical features laws have or could have had. This has led some to suggest a departure from the canonical BSA by substituting or embellishing its desiderata of simplicity and strength with others tailored to making sense of these features (Hall, 2015; Hicks, 2018; Dorst, 2019; Jaag & Loew, 2020)

  • The canonical BSA settles an explanatory ordering for characteristics of laws generated in response to Euthyphro-style questions, which we might display as follows: Strength & Simplicity ⇒ Laws ⇒ Necessity (Laws are necessary because they are laws, but they are laws because they follow from a system which achieves a best compromise of simplicity and strength.)

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge of the laws of nature confers upon us a great deal of practical ability. It enables us to predict, manipulate, construct, avoid and generally comprehend much about the world. It would be more than curious if there was no explanation of that fact; something about laws explains why knowledge of them is able to facilitate this. Recent commentary on the Humean Best Systems Account (BSA) of laws has brought closer attention to the question of laws’ practical value.

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BSA and Euthryphro‐style questions
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The pragmatic turn
The case for a revisionary BSA
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The canon defended
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Pragmatic how?
What do we want from laws?
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What can we access?
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Does physics care?
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Summing up the revisionary proposals
Conclusion
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Full Text
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