This new study provides a refreshing look at the issue of exceptions and
shows that much of the problem stems from a failure to recognize at
least two kinds of exception-ridden law: ceteris paribus laws and ideal
laws. Billy Wheeler offers the first book-length discussion of ideal
laws. The key difference between these two kinds of laws concerns the
nature of the conditions that need to be satisfied and their
epistemological role in the law's formulation and discovery. He presents
a Humean-inspired approach that draws heavily on concepts from the
information and computing sciences. Specifically, Wheeler argues that
laws are best seen as algorithms for compressing empirical data and that
ideal laws are needed as 'lossy compressors' for complex data.
Major figures in the metaphysics of science receive special attention
such as Ronald Giere, Bas van Fraassen, Nancy Cartwright, David Lewis
and Marc Lange. This book is essential reading for philosophers of
science and will interest metaphysicians, epistemologists and others
interested in applying concepts from computing to traditional
philosophical problems.