Authors
Michael Weisberg, Ryan Muldoon
Publication date
2009/4
Journal
Philosophy of science
Volume
76
Issue
2
Pages
225-252
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
Because contemporary scientific research is conducted by groups of scientists, understanding scientific progress requires understanding this division of cognitive labor. We present a novel agent-based model of scientific research in which scientists divide their labor to explore an unknown epistemic landscape. Scientists aim to find the most epistemically significant research approaches. We consider three different search strategies that scientists can adopt for exploring the landscape. In the first, scientists work alone and do not let the discoveries of the community influence their actions. This is compared with two social research strategies: Followers are biased toward what others have already discovered, and we find that pure populations of these scientists do less well than scientists acting independently. However, pure populations of mavericks, who try to avoid research approaches that have already been taken …
Total citations
Scholar articles
M Weisberg, R Muldoon - Philosophy of science, 2009