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(2009) Knowing the structure of nature, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Structural Realism (SR) is meant to be a substantive philosophical position concerning what there is in the world and what can be known of it. It is realist because it asserts the existence of a mind-independent world, and it is structural because what is knowable of the world is said to be its structure only. As a slogan, the thesis is that knowledge can reach only up to the structural features of the world. This chapter unravels and criticises the metaphysical presuppositions of SR. It questions its very possibility as a substantive — and viable — realist thesis.
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Full citation:
Psillos, S. (2009). Is structural realism possible?, in Knowing the structure of nature, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 125-135.
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