TY - JOUR T1 - Erkenntnis der unterphysischen Welt A1 - Oelhaf, Robert C. JA - Elem. d. Naturw. JF - Elemente der Naturwissenschaft PY - 1991 VL - 54 SP - 101 EP - 108 DO - 10.18756/edn.54.101 SN - p-ISSN 0422-9630 LA - de N2 -
In seeleing to develop explanatoryprinc1ples in the inorganic world, we are challenged to not forsake sense experience. This method is inapplicahle to sub—nature because of the lack of sense organs for this realm. In order to discover explanations for the phenomena of sub—nature, we are forced to develop field theories. When these theories are based on critical experiments, they become reliahle explanatory or causal principles for the physics of sub—nature. Thus pysical theory plays the role for sub—nature which the primary phenomenon ( Urphiinomen ) plays in the inorganic world, and which the ideal type (Typus) plays in the organic world. In so far as sub-nature mirrors organic nature, similarities between them appear, which distinguish them from the inorganic realm. [...]
In seeleing to develop explanatoryprinc1ples in the inorganic world, we are challenged to not forsake sense experience. This method is inapplicahle to sub—nature because of the lack of sense organs for this realm. In order to discover explanations for the phenomena of sub—nature, we are forced to develop field theories. When these theories are based on critical experiments, they become reliahle explanatory or causal principles for the physics of sub—nature. Thus pysical theory plays the role for sub—nature which the primary phenomenon ( Urphiinomen ) plays in the inorganic world, and which the ideal type (Typus) plays in the organic world. In so far as sub-nature mirrors organic nature, similarities between them appear, which distinguish them from the inorganic realm. [...]
In seeleing to develop explanatoryprinc1ples in the inorganic world, we are challenged to not forsake sense experience. This method is inapplicahle to sub—nature because of the lack of sense organs for this realm. In order to discover explanations for the phenomena of sub—nature, we are forced to develop field theories. When these theories are based on critical experiments, they become reliahle explanatory or causal principles for the physics of sub—nature. Thus pysical theory plays the role for sub—nature which the primary phenomenon ( Urphiinomen ) plays in the inorganic world, and which the ideal type (Typus) plays in the organic world. In so far as sub-nature mirrors organic nature, similarities between them appear, which distinguish them from the inorganic realm. [...]