This provocative and critical work addresses the question of why
scientific realists and positivists consider experimental physics to be
a natural and empirical science. Taking insights from contemporary
science studies, continental philosophy, and the history of physics,
this book describes and analyses the metaphysical presuppositions that
underwrite the technological use of experimental apparatus and
instruments to explore, model, and understand nature. By revealing this
metaphysical foundation, the author questions whether experimental
physics is a natural and empirical science at all.