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(2017) The science and art of simulation I, Dordrecht, Springer.
The article analyzes the notions of analogue and digital simulation as found in scientific and philosophical literature. The purpose is to distinguish computer simulations from laboratory experimentation on several grounds, including ontological, epistemological, pragmatic/intentional, and methodological. To this end, it argues that analogue simulations are best understood as part of the laboratory instrumentarium, whereas digital simulations are computational methods for solving a simulation model. The article ends by showing how the analogue-digital distinction is at the heart of contemporary debates on the epistemological and methodological power of computer simulations.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-55762-5_12
Full citation:
Durán, J. M. (2017)., Varieties of simulations: from the analogue to the digital, in M. M. Resch, A. Kaminski & P. Gehring (eds.), The science and art of simulation I, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 175-192.
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