An example of an analogy used to discucss science:
"But QBism ['Quantum Bayesianism'] is a way of thinking about science quite generally, not just quantum physics, and it is pertinent even when probabilistic judgements, and therefore 'Bayesianism', play no role at all. I nevertheless retain the term 'QBism', both to acknowledge the history behind it, and because a secondary meaning remains apt in the broader context: QBism is as big a break with twentieth-century ways of thinking about science as Cubism was with nineteenth-century ways of thinking about art."
Mermin, N. David (2017) Why QBism is not the Copenhagen interpretation and what John Bell might have thought of it, in, Neils Bohr and the Philosophy of Physics. Twenty-first-century perspectives (Jan Faye & Henry J. Folse, eds.) Bloomsbury Academic: London, pp.367-377.
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