Abstract
Publications in contemporary science journals often include figures like graphs, diagrams, photographs, and MRIs, which are presented as support for the hypothesis the author is defending. As a first step to explaining how figures contribute to confirmation, I present an account of visual representation and use examples to show how the visual format is involved in the support those figures provide the authors’ conclusions. I then show that attempts to explain what figures contribute to scientific arguments without analyzing them as visual representations (for example by translating them into linguistic representations) will not succeed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy,History
Reference9 articles.
1. Goodman’s Rejection of Resemblance;Files;Goodman’s Rejection of Resemblance,1996
2. The Truth in Pictures;Perini;The Truth in Pictures,2005
Cited by
35 articles.
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