Jacob's Ladder and Scientific Ontologies
Julio Michael Stern

TL;DR
This paper explores how a constructivist epistemological framework, combining Piaget's ideas and Bayesian methods, can address knowledge construction, exemplified through historical chemistry episodes and the concept of eigen-solutions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel epistemological approach integrating cognitive constructivism, von Foerster's metaphor, and Bayesian inference to analyze scientific ontologies and knowledge re-equilibration.
Findings
Illustrates the framework with historical chemistry cases
Provides guidelines for scientific development and argumentation
Connects epistemology with formal Bayesian methods
Abstract
The main goal of this article is to use the epistemological framework of a specific version of Cognitive Constructivism to address Piaget's central problem of knowledge construction, namely, the re-equilibration of cognitive structures. The distinctive objective character of this constructivist framework is based on Heinz von Foerster's fundamental metaphor of - objects as tokens for eigen-solutions, and is also supported by formal inference methods of Bayesian statistics. This epistemological perspective is illustrated using some episodes in the history of chemistry concerning the definition or identification of chemical elements. Some of von Foerster's epistemological imperatives provide general guidelines of development and argumentation.
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Cognitive Science and Mapping · Philosophy and History of Science
