Abstrakt: |
Until relatively recent times very few philosophical studies about thought experiments were available. Among these pioneering works are those of Ernst Mach, Karl R. Popper and Thomas S. Kuhn, respectively. In this article, I begin by analyzing the way in which Mach understood this type of experiment. Later, I will review the positions developed by Popper and Kuhn on the matter. Afterwards I will analyze a thought experiment, the socalled "Stevin on the Inclined Plane", in order to show that Mach reading of it is incorrect. At the end of the text I will discuss these three positions with the aim of showing that they contain, after all, the germ for a better understanding of thought experiments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |