Personnaliser

OK

Simulation and Similarity - Weisberg

Note : 0

0 avis
  • Soyez le premier à donner un avis

Vous en avez un à vendre ?

Vendez-le-vôtre

184,23 €

Produit Neuf

  • Ou 46,06 € /mois

    • Livraison : 25,00 €
    • Livré entre le 18 et le 23 mai
    Voir les modes de livraison

    Kelindo

    PRO Vendeur favori

    4,8/5 sur + de 1 000 ventes

    Apres acceptation de la commande, le delai moyen d'expedition depuis le Japon est de 48 heures. Le delai moyen de livraison est de 3 a 4 semaines. En cas de circonstances exceptionnelles, les delais peuvent s'etendre jusqu'à 2 mois.

    Publicité
     
    Vous avez choisi le retrait chez le vendeur à
    • Payez directement sur Rakuten (CB, PayPal, 4xCB...)
    • Récupérez le produit directement chez le vendeur
    • Rakuten vous rembourse en cas de problème

    Gratuit et sans engagement

    Félicitations !

    Nous sommes heureux de vous compter parmi nos membres du Club Rakuten !

    En savoir plus

    Retour

    Horaires

        Note :


        Avis sur Simulation And Similarity Format Relié  - Livre Philosophie

        Note : 0 0 avis sur Simulation And Similarity Format Relié  - Livre Philosophie

        Les avis publiés font l'objet d'un contrôle automatisé de Rakuten.


        Présentation Simulation And Similarity Format Relié

         - Livre Philosophie

        Livre Philosophie - Weisberg - 01/01/2018 - Relié - Langue : Anglais

        . .

      • Auteur(s) : Weisberg
      • Editeur : Academic
      • Langue : Anglais
      • Parution : 01/01/2018
      • Format : Moyen, de 350g à 1kg
      • Nombre de pages : 212.0
      • Expédition : 427
      • Dimensions : 24.4 x 16.1 x 16.0
      • ISBN : 0199933669



      • Résumé :
        In the 1950s, John Reber convinced many Californians that the best way to solve the state's water shortage problem was to dam up the San Francisco Bay. Against massive political pressure, Reber's opponents persuaded lawmakers that doing so would lead to disaster. They did this not by empirical measurement alone, but also through the construction of a model. Simulation and Similarity explains why this was a good strategy while simultaneously providing an account of modeling and idealization in modern scientific practice. Michael Weisberg focuses on concrete, mathematical, and computational models in his consideration of the nature of models, the practice of modeling, and nature of the relationship between models and real-world phenomena.

        In addition to a careful analysis of physical, computational, and mathematical models, Simulation and Similarity offers a novel account of the model/world relationship. Breaking with the dominant tradition, which favors the analysis of this relation through logical notions such as isomorphism, Weisberg instead presents a similarity-based account called weighted feature matching. This account is developed with an eye to understanding how modeling is actually practiced. Consequently, it takes into account the ways in which scientists' theoretical goals shape both the applications and the analyses of their models....

        Biographie:

        • Contents

        • Preface

        • 1 Introduction

        • 1.1 Two Aquatic Puzzles

        • 1.2 Models of Modeling

        • 2 Three Kinds of Models

        • 2.1 Concrete Model: The San Francisco Bay-Delta Model

        • 2.2 Mathematical Model: Lotka-Volterra Model

        • 2.3 Computational Model: Schelling's Segregation Model

        • 2.4 Common Features of these Models

        • 2.5 Only Three Types of Models?

        • 2.6 Fewer Than Three Types of Model?

        • 3 The Anatomy of Models: Structure and Construal

        • 3.1 Structure

        • 3.1.1 Concrete Structures

        • 3.1.2 Mathematical

        • 3.1.3 Computational

        • 3.2 Model Descriptions

        • 3.3 Construal

        • 3.4 Representational Capacity of Structures

        • 4 Fictions and Folk Ontology

        • 4.1 Against Maths: Individuation, Causes, and Face Value Practice

        • 4.2 A Simple Fictions Account

        • 4.3 Enriching the Simple Account

        • 4.3.1 Waltonian Fictionalism

        • 4.3.2 Fictions without Models

        • 4.4 Why I am not a Fictionalist

        • 4.4.1 Variation

        • 4.4.2 Representational Capacity of Different Models

        • 4.4.3 Making Sense of Modeling

        • 4.4.4 Variation in Practice

        • 4.5 Folk ontology

        • 4.6 Maths, Interpretation, and Folk Ontology

        • 5 Target Directed Modeling

        • 5.1 Model Development

        • 5.2 Analysis of the Model

        • 5.2.1 Complete Analysis

        • 5.2.2 Goal-directed Analysis

        • 5.3 Model/Target Comparison

        • 5.3.1 Phenomena and Target Systems

        • 5.3.2 Establishing the fit between Model and Target

        • 5.3.3 Representations of Targets

        • 6 Idealization

        • 6.1 Three Kinds of Idealization

        • 6.1.1 Galilean idealization

        • 6.1.2 Minimalist idealization

        • 6.1.3 Multiple Models Idealization

        • 6.2 Representational Ideals and Fidelity Criteria

        • 6.2.1 Completeness

        • 6.2.2 Simplicity

        • 6.2.3 1-Causal

        • 6.2.4 Maxout

        • 6.2.5 P-General

        • 6.3 Idealization and Representational Ideals

        • 6.4 Idealization and Target Directed Modeling

        • 7 Modeling Without a Specific Target

        • 7.1 Generalized Modeling

        • 7.1.1 How Possibly Explanations

        • 7.1.2 Minimal Models and First Order Causal Structures

        • 7.2 Hypothetical Modeling

        • 7.2.1 Contingent Non-existence: xDNA

        • 7.2.2 Impossible Targets: Infinite Population Growth and Perpetual Motion

        • 7.3 Targetless Modeling

        • 7.4 A Moving Target: The Case of Three-sex Biology

        • 8 An Account of Similarity

        • 8.1 Desiderata for Model/World Relations

        • 8.2 Model Theoretic Accounts

        • 8.3 Similarity

        • 8.4 Tversky's Contrast Account

        • 8.5 Attributes and Mechanisms

        • 8.6 Feature Sets, Construals, and Target Systems

        • 8.7 Modeling Goals and Weighting Parameters

        • 8.8 Weighting Function and Background Theory

        • 8.9 Satisfying the Desiderata

        • 9 Robustness Analysis and Idealization

        • 9.1 Levins and Wimsatt on Robustness

        • 9.2 Finding Robust Theorems

        • 9.3 Three Kinds of Robustness

        • 9.3.1 Parameter Robustness

        • 9.3.2 Structural Robustness

        • 9.3.3 Representational Robustness

        • 9.4 Robustness and Confirmation

        • 10 Conclusion: The Practice of Modeling

        • References

        ...

        Sommaire:
        Michael Weisberg is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania.

        ...

        Détails de conformité du produit

        Consulter les détails de conformité de ce produit (

        Personne responsable dans l'UE

        )
        Le choixNeuf et occasion
        Minimum5% remboursés
        La sécuritéSatisfait ou remboursé
        Le service clientsÀ votre écoute
        LinkedinFacebookTwitterInstagramYoutubePinterestTiktok
        visavisa
        mastercardmastercard
        klarnaklarna
        paypalpaypal
        floafloa
        americanexpressamericanexpress
        Rakuten Logo
        • Rakuten Kobo
        • Rakuten TV
        • Rakuten Viber
        • Rakuten Viki
        • Plus de services
        • À propos de Rakuten
        Rakuten.com