Measurement perspective, process, and the pandemic
Title
Measurement perspective, process, and the pandemic
Description
This discussion centers on two desiderata: the role of measurement in information-gathering and physical interaction in scientific practice. By taking inspiration from van Fraassen’s (2008) view, we present a methodological account of perspectival measurement that addresses empirical practice where there is complex intervention, disagreeing results, and limited theory. The specific aim of our account is to provide a methodological prescription for developing measurement processes in the context of limited theory. The account should be useful to philosophers of science, who are interested in the intersection between representation and intervention; scientists, who are interested in methodological suggestions for theory-development and reliability; and interdisciplinary researchers, who are interested in the intersections between the pandemic, built environments, and social processes. We apply the process-view of measurement to COVID-19, specifically, measuring replication in the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The aim is to show that our account tracks key elements—manipulation/intervention, independence, invariance, and theory-development—by organizing unfolding measurement processes. Additionally, we use our account to make prescriptive suggestions for measurement practice in the COVID-19 context by discussing the need to broaden measurement perspective on interaction, manipulation, and production.
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article
Citation Info
Keyser, V., & Howland, H. (2021). Measurement perspective, process, and the pandemic. European Journal for Philosophy of Science, 11(1), 13. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13194-020-00326-5
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Citation
“Measurement perspective, process, and the pandemic,” Outstanding Faculty Publications, accessed November 23, 2024, https://facpub.library.fresnostate.edu/items/show/264.