Dear all,
our next speaker in the Philosophy of Science Colloquium organized by
the Institute Vienna Circle is Alice Di Noto (IVC Fellow, University of
Trento), who will give a talk on April 16, 4.45-6.15 pm.
All are welcome!
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*Philosophy of Science Colloquium TALK: Alice Di Noto (IVC Fellow,
University of Trento)*
The Notion of "Functional A Priori" in Arthur Pap's Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Science Colloquium
The Institute Vienna Circle holds a Philosophy of Science Colloquium
with talks by our present fellows.
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Date:* 16/04/2026
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Time:* 16h45
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Venue:* New Institute Building (NIG), Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien, HS 3C
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Abstract:*
In this talk, I will present Arthur Pap’s contribution to debates about
the nature and function of the /a priori/ in scientific knowledge.
Arthur Pap was a Swiss philosopher of science of Jewish origin who lived
between 1921 and 1959. Like many other European philosophers at that
time, he was forced to move to the United States to escape Nazi
persecution. There, a multifaceted philosophical environment was
emerging, thanks to the interactions between European philosophers of
science who had emigrated and their American colleagues. It was in this
context that Pap, influenced by logical empiricism, neo-Kantianism,
conventionalism, and American pragmatism, developed his functional
interpretation of the /a priori/.
I will outline Pap’s criticism of the rigid dichotomy between analytic
/a priori/ and synthetic /a posteriori/ judgments, as postulated by
logical empiricists, and his dynamic point of view, in which scientific
propositions can change their function and epistemological status at
different stages of enquiry. Pap describes a “path towards analyticity”,
whereby certain synthetic /a posteriori/ empirical laws that have been
extensively confirmed by experience may, at a later stage of research,
be “held fast”, so to speak, irrespective of any further empirical
verification, and begin to function as principles that guide the
interpretation of certain classes of phenomena. The more these laws are
confirmed by experience, and the more effective they are in interpreting
subsequent experience, the closer they will come to /a priori/ status.
They will eventually be used to define the very empirical concepts they
encompass, thus becoming formally analytic. I will show how, in Pap’s
perspective, these statements can function as a leading principles for
subsequent research and explain their constructive role also. Then, I
will explain their relationship with experience and with the other kinds
of /a priori/ identified by Pap: the “material” and the “formal” /a
priori/. Finally, I will compare Pap's thesis with other, better-known
20th-century theories of the relativised and dynamic /a priori/.