English

On Under-determination in cosmology

History and Philosophy of Physics 2014-06-19 v1 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology

Abstract

I discuss how modern cosmology illustrates under-determination of theoretical hypotheses by data, in ways that are different from most philosophical discussions. I emphasize cosmology's concern with what data could in principle be collected by a single observer (Section 2); and I give a broadly sceptical discussion of cosmology's appeal to the cosmological principle as a way of breaking the under-determination (Section 3). I confine most of the discussion to the history of the observable universe from about one second after the Big Bang, as described by the mainstream cosmological model: in effect, what cosmologists in the early 1970s dubbed the `standard model', as elaborated since then. But in the closing Section 4, I broach some questions about times earlier than one second.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1406.4747,
  title  = {On Under-determination in cosmology},
  author = {Jeremy Butterfield},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1406.4747},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

31 pages, no figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T04:41:30.322Z