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Conservation Laws in Scientific Explanations: Constraints or Coincidences?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2022

Abstract

A conservation law in physics can be either a constraint on the kinds of interaction there could be or a coincidence of the kinds of interactions there actually are. This is an important, unjustly neglected distinction. Only if a conservation law constrains the possible kinds of interaction can a derivation from it constitute a scientific explanation despite failing to describe the causal/mechanical details behind the result derived. This conception of the relation between “bottom-up” scientific explanations and one kind of “top-down” scientific explanation is motivated by several examples from classical and modern physics.

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Research Article
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Copyright © The Philosophy of Science Association

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