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Main Authors: Aguilar, Omar, Aguirre, Anthony
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.10740
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author Aguilar, Omar
Aguirre, Anthony
author_facet Aguilar, Omar
Aguirre, Anthony
contents This work aims to formalize some of the ways scientific concepts are formed in the process of theoretical physics discovery. Since this may at first seem like a task beyond the scope of the exact sciences (natural and formal sciences), we begin by presenting arguments for why scientific concept formation can be formalized. Then, we introduce type theory as a natural and well-suited framework for this formalization. We formalize what we call "ways of discovering new concepts" including concept distinction, property preservation, and concept change, as cognitive typing rules. Next, we apply these cognitive typing rules to two case studies of conceptual discovery in the history of physics: Einstein's reasoning leading to the impossibility of frozen waves, and his conceptual path to the relativity of time. In these historical episodes, we recast what a physicist might informally call "ways of discovering new scientific concepts" as compositional typing rules built from cognitive typing rules - thus formalizing them as scientific discovery mechanisms. Lastly, we computationally model the type-theoretic reconstruction of Einstein's conceptual path to the relativity of time as a program synthesis task.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_10740
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle How are Scientific Concepts Birthed? Typing Rules of Concept Formation in Theoretical Physics Reasoning
Aguilar, Omar
Aguirre, Anthony
History and Philosophy of Physics
Artificial Intelligence
This work aims to formalize some of the ways scientific concepts are formed in the process of theoretical physics discovery. Since this may at first seem like a task beyond the scope of the exact sciences (natural and formal sciences), we begin by presenting arguments for why scientific concept formation can be formalized. Then, we introduce type theory as a natural and well-suited framework for this formalization. We formalize what we call "ways of discovering new concepts" including concept distinction, property preservation, and concept change, as cognitive typing rules. Next, we apply these cognitive typing rules to two case studies of conceptual discovery in the history of physics: Einstein's reasoning leading to the impossibility of frozen waves, and his conceptual path to the relativity of time. In these historical episodes, we recast what a physicist might informally call "ways of discovering new scientific concepts" as compositional typing rules built from cognitive typing rules - thus formalizing them as scientific discovery mechanisms. Lastly, we computationally model the type-theoretic reconstruction of Einstein's conceptual path to the relativity of time as a program synthesis task.
title How are Scientific Concepts Birthed? Typing Rules of Concept Formation in Theoretical Physics Reasoning
topic History and Philosophy of Physics
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.10740