English

Phenomenological and ontological models in natural science

History and Philosophy of Physics 2007-10-18 v1 General Physics

Abstract

The observation of the nature and world represents the main source of human knowledge on the basis of our reason. At the present it is also the use of precise measurement approaches, which may contribute significantly to the knowledge of the world but cannot substitute fully the knowledge of the whole reality obtained also with the help of our senses. It is not possible to omit the ontological nature of matter world. However, any metaphysical consideration was abandoned when mainly under the influence of positivistic philosophy phenomenological models started to be strongly preferred and any intuitive approach based on human senses has been refused. Their success in application region has seemed to provide decisive support for such preference. However, it is limited practically to the cases when only interpolation between measured data is involved. When the extrapolation is required the ontological models are much more reliable and practically indispensable in realistic approach.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0710.3225,
  title  = {Phenomenological and ontological models in natural science},
  author = {Milos V. Lokajicek},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0710.3225},
  year   = {2007}
}

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8 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:32:55.332Z