Abstract
We sley Salmon, in his influential and detailed book, Four Decades of Scientific Explanation, argues that the pragmatic approach to scientific
explanation, “construed as the claim that scientific explanation can be explicated
entirely in pragmatic terms” (1989, 185) is inadequate. The specific inadequacy
ascribed to a pragmatic account is that objective relevance relations cannot be
incorporated into such an account. Salmon relies on the arguments given in
Kitcher and Salmon (1987) to ground this objection. He also suggests that Peter
Railton’s concepts of the ideal explanatory text and explanatory information
(Railton 1981) can provide what the pragmatic approach lacks. This suggestion
is not a conclusion of course; we read it as the promotion of part of a research
program aimed at forging a greater consensus on scientific explanation-an
admirable goal. However, we do not see the pragmatic approach as inadequate.
We will show that a synthetic account inspired by Salmon’s adaptation of
Railton would be equivalent to van Fraassen’s pragmatic account in three
respects: accepting or rejecting requests for explanation; the practice of giving
scientific explanations; and the evaluation of the goodness of explanations. We
include all three under the general rubric of explanatory “practice.” Admittedly
these are not the only three features by which an account of explanation might
be evaluated. Roughly, we mean to show that a synthetic account cannot do a
better job of accounting for the scientific practices which are of importance to
the constructive empiricist, and therefore no argument can be presented to the
constructive empiricist to convince her that by her own standards the synthetic
account is superior.