This paper defends an inferential conception of scientific representation. It approaches the notion of representation in a deflationary spirit, and minimally characterizes the concept as it appears in science by means of two necessary conditions: its essential directionality and its capacity to allow surrogate reasoning and inference. The conception is defended by showing that it successfully meets the objections that make its competitors, such as isomorphism and similarity, untenable. In addition the inferential conception captures the objectivity of the cognitive representations used by science, it sheds light on their truth and completeness, and it explains the source of the analogy between scientific and artistic modes of representation.
Background The risk of Cushing syndrome (CS) patients experiencing a thrombotic event (TE) is significantly higher (odds ratio; OR 18%) than that of the general population. However, there are currently no anticoagulation guidelines. Methods A retrospective, single-center, longitudinal study of patients undergoing all types of treatment—surgical (pituitary, unilateral, and bilateral adrenalectomy) and medical treatment—was undertaken. TEs were recorded at any point up until last patient follow-up; myocardial infarction (MI), deep venous thrombosis (DVT), and pulmonary embolism (PE) or stroke. Patients’ doses and complications of anticoagulation were recorded. Results Included were 208 patients; a total of 165 (79.3%) were women, and mean age at presentation was 44 ± 14.7 years. Thirty-nine (18.2%) patients had a TE; extremity DVT (38%), cerebrovascular accident (27%), MI (21%), and PE (14%). Of 56 TEs, 27 (48%) were arterial and 29 (52%) were venous. Patients who underwent bilateral adrenalectomy (BLA) had an odds ratio of 3.74 (95% CI 1.69-8.27) of developing a TE. Of patients with TEs, 40.5% experienced the event within the first 60 days after surgery. Baseline 24-hour urinary free cortisol levels did not differ in patients with or without TE after BLA. Of 197 patients who underwent surgery, 50 (25.38%) received anticoagulation after surgery, with 2% having bleeding complications. Conclusions The risk of TEs in patients with CS was approximately 20%. Many patients had more than 1 event, with higher risk 30 to 60 days postoperatively. The optimal prophylactic anticoagulation duration is unknown, but most likely needs to continue up to 60 days postoperatively, particularly after BLA.
This paper defends the deflationary character of two recent views regarding scientific representation, namely RIG Hughes' DDI model and the inferential conception. It is first argued that these views' deflationism is akin to the homonymous position in discussions regarding the nature of truth. There, we are invited to consider the platitudes that the predicate "true" obeys at the level of practice, disregarding any deeper, or more substantive, account of its nature. More generally, for any concept X, a deflationary approach is then defined in opposition to a substantive approach, where a substantive approach to X is an analysis of X in terms of some property P, or relation R, accounting for and explaining the standard use of X. It then becomes possible to characterize a deflationary view of scientific representation in three distinct senses, namely: a "no-theory" view, a "minimalist" view, and a "use-based" view -in line with three standard deflationary responses in the philosophical literature on truth. It is then argued that both the DDI model and the inferential conception may be suitably understood in any of these three different senses. The application of these deflationary 'hermeneutics' moreover yields significant improvements on the DDI model, which bring it closer to the inferential conception. It is finally argued that what these approaches have in common -the key to any deflationary account of scientific representation -is the denial that scientific representation may be ultimately reduced to any substantive explanatory property of sources, or targets, or their relations.Keywords: Deflationary Representation; models and idealization; deflationary accounts; theories of truth; inference. 2 1. Scientific Representation: The State of Play 'Science represents through its models -and this representational aim is characteristic, or defining, of its model-building activity'. As stated -in this minimal and restricted sense -this is as uncontroversial a claim as one may encounter in contemporary philosophy of science. But what is it that science represents, and how does it do it? These are much harder questions, and there is intense debate nowadays amongst philosophers regarding how best to address them. The various attempts to answer these questions can be distinguished in a number of different ways. In this paper I focus on one particular distinction between what I call 'substantive' and 'deflationary' accounts of representation. The former type claims that representation is some substantive or objective property or relation; the latter, by contrast, 'deflates' the notion of representation by claiming that there is no substantive property or relation at stake. These terms will be defined more fully below. Substantive accounts have traditionally been, implicitly if not explicitly, the norm in much of the discussion of scientific representation. Bas van Fraassen and Ronald Giere have often been thought to defend substantive analyses of representation (as isomorphism and similarity, respectively), alth...
Morphology permits the extracting of information to study patterns of disparity and diversity of a particular group of animals through time. Enrolment is a characteristic behaviour of trilobites, having been first recorded in the Cambrian and continued until their demise at the end of Permian mass extinction. Morphological trends related to enrolment strategies have been documented previously but are yet to have been analysed in a morphospace framework. Here we analyse the cephalic shape of a wide range of trilobite taxa using geometric morphometrics. These methodologies were implemented to explore whether the relationship between the shape of the head and the evolution of different enrolment styles correspond with an increase in morphospace or disparity during the Palaeozoic. Our results show distinct patterns of diversity and disparity in the functional morphology of trilobites during the Palaeozoic. Furthermore, these analyses show that enrolment types in trilobites without interlocking devices (e.g. cylindrical) permit more flexibility in the head shape, promoting higher rates of disparity, possibly leading to an enhanced ability to occupy a broad range of ecological niches. On the contrary, lower disparity cephalic shape constrains the way to enclose the body and consequently places limitations on the ability to adapt to new niches. Our results indicate that the higher rates of morpho-functional diversity and disparity coincide with the increase of morphospace in radiations in the early Palaeozoic (Cambrian and Ordovician) but also immediately after the Carboniferous-Permian biodiversification event. Low disparity rates constrain the success of trilobites with a specific enrolment type. Finally, the results show that sphaeroidal enrolment style was the most successful type that evolved independently in all trilobite orders. □ Arthropods, ecology, ecomorphology, evolution, functional morphology.
Abstract:Scientific representation is currently a booming topic, both in analytical philosophy and in history and philosophy of science. The analytical inquiry attempts to come to terms with the relation between theory and world; while historians and philosophers of science aim to develop an account of the practice of model building in the sciences. This article provides a review of recent work within both traditions, and ultimately argues for a practice-based account of the means employed by scientists to effectively achieve representations in the modelling sciences.
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