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Interpolation as Explanation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2022
Abstract
A (normalized) interpolant I in Craig's theorem is a kind of explanation why the consequence relation (from F to G) holds. This is because I is a summary of the interaction of the configurations specified by F and G, respectively, that shows how G follows from F. If explaining E means deriving it from a background theory T plus situational information A and if among the concepts of E we can separate those occurring only in T or only in A, then the interpolation theorem applies in two different ways yielding two different explanations and two different covering laws.
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- Explanation, Confirmation, and Scientific Inference
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- Copyright © 1999 by the Philosophy of Science Association
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