Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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Emergence and reduction in chemistry

ontological or epistemological concepts?

Lee McIntyre

pp. 337-343

Abstract

In this paper I argue that the ontological interpretation of the concepts of reduction and emergence is often misleading in the philosophy of science and should nearly always be eschewed in favor of an epistemological interpretation. As a paradigm case, an example is drawn from the philosophy of chemistry to illustrate the drawbacks of “ontological reduction” and “ontological emergence,” and the virtues of an epistemological interpretation of these concepts.

Publication details

Published in:

McIntyre Lee (2007) Topics in the philosophy of chemistry. Synthese 155 (3).

Pages: 337-343

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-006-9111-3

Full citation:

McIntyre Lee (2007) „Emergence and reduction in chemistry: ontological or epistemological concepts?“. Synthese 155 (3), 337–343.