Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2023
It’s uncontroversial that notions of idealization and approximation are central to understanding computer simulations and their rationale. So, for example, one common form of computer simulation is to abandon a realistic approach that is computationally non-tractable for a more idealized but computationally tractable approach. Many simulations of systems of interacting members can be understood this way. In such simulations, realistic descriptions of individual members are replaced with less realistic descriptions which have the virtue of making interactions computationally tractable. Such simulations can be supplemented with empirically determined correction factors which render the output produced by means of the idealizations more in accord, one hopes, with what the more realistic approach would have produced had it been computationally tractable. Another way to utilize computers is to replace an idealized but analytically tractable account of some phenomenon with a less idealized account which has no closed form or analytical solutions but where the computer can be used generate approximations to the desired solutions.
I would like to express my gratitude to the National Science Foundation (DIR-8920699) and the Ohio State University for providing funding for the project of which this paper forms a part.