The Objectivity of our Measures: How many Fundamental Units of Nature?

dc.contributor.authorSally Riordan
dc.contributor.otherHasok Chang
dc.creatorsr206@cam.ac.uk
dc.date.accessioned2021-01-29T16:20:18Z
dc.date.available2021-01-29T16:20:18Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.description.abstractThe fundamental constants of nature, as presented by modern science, can be conceived as natural measures of the universe. In comparison, the standards of the International System of Units, including the kilogram and the meter, are mind-made and hand-crafted to meet the demands of human life. In this paper, the gap between the natural and the conventional is squeezed from two directions. In the first place, we come to understand why the metric measures were originally conceived, by the best of scientists, as being “taken from nature” and “in no way arbitrary”. The kilogram of yesteryear was anchored in yesteryear's science and is reasonably considered natural with respect to that science. We also review a contemporary debate amongst physicists that questions whether any quantity, being necessarily written with units, can be truly fundamental. Modern notions of a fundamental constant are put under the spotlight; the kilogram emerges as bound up with contemporary science today as ever it was. In the picture being painted here, our measures are drawn as dynamic entities, epistemic tools that develop hand-in-hand with the rest of science, and whose significance goes much further than a metal artefact dangled from an abstract number line.
dc.formattalk
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsa.2014.09.005
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/26170
dc.relation.ispartofseries4; Open
dc.relation.isversionofDownstream publication: Riordan, Sally. (2015) "The objectivity of scientific measures." Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A, Special Issue 50 Integrated History and Philosophy of Science in Practice, 38-47.
dc.subjectcontemporary
dc.subjectmeasurement, structure of theories
dc.subjectphysics
dc.subjectdiscussing fundamental measurements in physics and suggesting that there could be only one fundamental unit of nature, with consideration of the history of metrology
dc.titleThe Objectivity of our Measures: How many Fundamental Units of Nature?

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