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College notes Philosophy of Science

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This document contains complete lecture notes from the subject philosophy of science (2024)

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College notities
College 1:

Philosophy of social science

What distinguishes science from non science?

How does one get from observations to theories, models, explanations?

What is a (good) scientific theory, explanation, model?

Is scientific knowledge objectivr? What is objectivity?

What role is there for values in science, if any?

Are there ethical or other limits to science?

What goals should science serve?



Philosophy is about reflecting on social science itself, in order to understand it
better


The demarcation problem
How to draw the line between science and non sciene?



College notities 1

, Why does it matter?
We think that science matters, ex: politicians base their statements on science.
Also, science is funded by public money, so where does it go?


Logical positivism
Movement in science that rose in the early 20th century. It was a group of
people who came together to think about questions in science. They worried
about the fact that they saw many theories in science that were way to
speculative. They were not based on proper scientific research

Vienna cricle: group of scientists reflecting on philisophical questions
about science

Aim: Development of a strictly scientific worldview

Against speculative philosophy, religious ideas, traditional worldvies



Side note: Why “positivism”

From positive in the sense of what is posited, what is given, what is laid down
Not in the sense of happy, in a good mood, constructive


Ideals

Strict empiricism: only empirical observation can give us knowledge: No
place for speculative and theoretical claims that are not based on
obesrvation

Use of formal logic and mathematics to create an ideal and precise
language for science: to guard againstunwarranted terminology and against
leaps to conclusions and unsupported theories



Core ideas: verifiability
An ideal and precise language of science

Gate-keeping: only statements that are firmly based on empirical
observation belong in the language of science

The verifiability criterion of meaning:



College notities 2

, Core ideas: Demarcation
Verifiablity as femarcation criterion

Only statments that satisfy the verifiability criterion are scientific, other
statements are non-scientific

(logic, mathematics, and statistics are not verifiable, but they are merely
linguistic conventions to help formulate scientific statements in a precise
manner



Core ideas: induction
Inductive method: from observations to general theories and empiricl
regularities / laws

Observations give rise to hypotheses and theories

And they serve to support / confirm them

Let the data speak form themsleves



Karl popper’s core ides
Fallibility and tentativeness of human knowledge

Dogmatic vs critical thinking
Dogmatic thinking = believing that you are right = an unscientific attitude, you
should always be open to criticism
→ The fact that we are human beings that are fallliable was crucial for him:
What they think they know can always be wrong. It is possible for people to
make mistakes.


Problem of induction

Reasoning from individual observations to general conclusions is logically
invalid

So induction can never completely support general scientific laws and
theories

Popper: no use for induction in science



College notities 3

, —> You can only observe so many swans

Falsifiablility as demarcation criterion

Scientific knowledge is falsifiable knowledge.

Scientific statements ought to ‘clash’ with the world

It must be possible to prove them false through experiments and
observation

Example:

1. Unicorns exist and don’t exist = Already false so not falsifiable

2. Unicorns either exist or they don’t = Already false so not falsifiable

3. Unicorns exist = Falsifiable

4. Unicorns don’t exist = Falsifiable



Example of unfalsifiable theories
Freud: Every little boy has an Oedipus complex or is in denial of it

Marx: Changes in the means of production lead to changes in labor conditions,
which lead to changes in political power, which in turn lead to changes in
ideology
example of a falsified theory

Secularization thesis: through enlightenment modernization, rationalization,
combined with the ascent of science and technology, religious authority
diminishes in all aspects of social life and governance


Scientific method for Popper

Science is about formulating theories (conjectures) in such a way that they
can be falsified by empirical observations

Theories must then be tested as rigorously as possible (attempted
refutations)

We accept those theories that have survived testing

Comparison, popper vs logical positivism
Popper:



College notities 4

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