In Defense of Dispositions

1. Dispositions are as shameful in many eyes as pregnant spinsters used to be—ideally to be explained away, or entitled by a shotgun wedding to take the name of some decently real categorical property. It is time to remove this lingering Victorian prejudice. Dispositions, like unmarried mothers, can manage on their own. They have been traduced, and my object here is to restore their good name.

[1]  P. Frank,et al.  Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science , 1968 .

[2]  Henry S. Leonard,et al.  Testability and Meaning. , 1937 .

[3]  Joseph Turner MAXWELL ON THE METHOD OF PHYSICAL ANALOGY* , 1955, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.