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Summary SV philosophy of science (slides + full lesson notes + table of contents)

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This course is new this year! There are already about 50 people who have purchased this SV via . There are a lot of people who sent me afterwards that they passed this course, without reading my summary beforehand and simply taking the exam with control F. You can also send me a message at and I'll sell it for 6 euro. Color code in my summary (normally I don't fluoresce my SV beforehand but I thought this would be useful for an open book exam) - blue: key terms (EXAM?) - yellow: key ideas, important issues - green: names Unfortunately, the self-study articles are not included, but I have seen that summaries are already circulating here. Tip for ControlF use on the exam for incommensurability, for example, then I won't type the full word because it's sometimes in different forms in my SV (e.g. incommensurable), so I'll type: incommens and all results will come up. My SV is mainly in English because the course is taught in English, but if it's too difficult, I've added a Dutch explanation.

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Elise Lamont grijs: lesnotities




PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
INHOUDSOPGAVE

lecture 1 ....................................................................................................................................... 7

Do atoms exist? ............................................................................................................................ 7

“Do atoms exist?” as an example of the core metaphysical and epistemological questions of the
philosophy of science ................................................................................................................. 7

Overview of the philosophy of science of the past 100 years ........................................................... 8

lecture 2 ......................................................................................................................................11

Science is great ...........................................................................................................................11

Knowledge as justified true belief (JTB account of knowledge).........................................................11

Scientific justifications are special ...............................................................................................12

Too rosy a picture? .....................................................................................................................13

The Demarcation Problem: What distinguishes science from pseudo-science? !!!!!........................13

Why does demarcation matter?...................................................................................................13

Towards a tentative answer.........................................................................................................14

Deductive and Inductive reasoning ..............................................................................................14
The inductive leap ............................................................................................................................ 15
Inductive reasoning (classical conception) ...................................................................................... 15
Naïve verificationism ........................................................................................................................ 16
Does the inductive method produce knowledge? ............................................................................. 17

Where are we in the argument of this lecture? ...............................................................................18

The demarcation problem around 1900 ........................................................................................18

Popper on Marxism and psychoanalysis .......................................................................................18

Good scientific theories (according to Popper) ..............................................................................19

falsifactionism Sir Karl Popper (1902-1994), Die Logik der Forschung (1934), The Logic of Scientific
Discovery (1959) ..........................................................................................................................19

Impact ........................................................................................................................................20

Lecture 3 .....................................................................................................................................20

Today .......................................................................................................................................20




1

,Elise Lamont grijs: lesnotities


The Ptolemaic System .................................................................................................................21

Intellectual Background .............................................................................................................21

Claudius Ptolemy ......................................................................................................................21
Circles upon circles ......................................................................................................................... 22

Why Ptolemy’s system persisted .................................................................................................23

Some insights ...........................................................................................................................23

Towards heliocentrism ................................................................................................................24

Copernicus (1473–1543) ............................................................................................................24
A search for simplicity and harmony................................................................................................. 24

Brightness variations of the planets (example for simplification) ......................................................25

Tycho Brahe (1546–1601) ...........................................................................................................25

Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) ......................................................................................................26

Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) .........................................................................................................26
The Phases of Venus ........................................................................................................................ 26

Crucial Experiments...................................................................................................................27
Were the phases of Venus a crucial experiment? ............................................................................. 27
Was Mars’s motion a crucial experiment? ........................................................................................ 28

Relevant take-aways ..................................................................................................................28

Case studies as a method ............................................................................................................29

Let’s deepen the worry about case studiES ...................................................................................... 29

Lecture 4 .....................................................................................................................................30

Thomas Samuel Kuhn (1922 – 1996) ..............................................................................................30

Kuhn Against “theory talk” ...........................................................................................................31

What is a paradigm?...................................................................................................................31

Paradigms as the Constellation of Group Commitments ...............................................................32

Disciplinary matrix .....................................................................................................................32

Paradigms as Shared Examples....................................................................................................33

Quick summary of the lecture so far .............................................................................................34

The four phases of scientific development ....................................................................................34

Pre-paradigmatic phase .............................................................................................................35
Example: The Copernican Revolution Pre-paradigmatic phase: Before Ptolemy ............................... 35

Normal Science Science under a dominant paradigm ....................................................................36
Example: The Copernican Revolution Normal Science: Ptolemy’s system in use ............................. 36
Crisis When the paradigm begins to break down............................................................................37
Example: The Copernican Revolution Crisis: anomalies accumulate ............................................... 37


2

,Elise Lamont grijs: lesnotities


Revolution Paradigm shift - a new framework replaces the old ........................................................38
Example: The Copernican Revolution Revolution: ............................................................................ 38
Incommensurability ......................................................................................................................... 39

The Popper-Kuhn debate..............................................................................................................40

Context ....................................................................................................................................40

Is science cumulative and objective (popper), or revolutionary and socially embedded (kuhn)? ..........40

Popper’s replies ........................................................................................................................41

What to make of the debate?.......................................................................................................42

Post-Kuhn ...................................................................................................................................42

The practice-turn in the philosophy of science ..............................................................................42

Lecture 5 ....................................................................................................................................43

Where are we? Where will we go? .................................................................................................43

Imre Lakatos (1922 – 1974)............................................................................................................43

Content & Structure of Lakatos’ lecture ........................................................................................46

Where to situate Lakatos on the normative/descriptive divide in the philosophy of science? ...............46

Scientific research programmes (SRP) .........................................................................................47
Heuristics ........................................................................................................................................ 48
A SRP example case: Halley’s comet................................................................................................ 49
Progressive and Degenerating SRPs ................................................................................................. 49

Summing Up .............................................................................................................................51

Paul Feyerabend 1924–1994 .........................................................................................................51

Theoretical Anarchism ...............................................................................................................52
Anything goes ................................................................................................................................... 53

Proliferation of theory .................................................................................................................55

Galileo and the church ...............................................................................................................57

Context of discovery & Context of Justification ..............................................................................58

Lecture 6 .....................................................................................................................................60

Of Cranks and Crackpots: What Eccentrics Can Teach Us about the Epistemology of Mathematics 61

Three-tiered model of argumentation ...........................................................................................61

Standard Academic Publishing ....................................................................................................61

Manifest and operative concepts .................................................................................................62

lecture 7 ......................................................................................................................................63

Today: feminist philosophy of science ..........................................................................................63

Four waves of feminism ..............................................................................................................63


3

, Elise Lamont grijs: lesnotities


First Wave (19th–early 20th century) ................................................................................................ 63
Second Wave (1960s–1980s)............................................................................................................ 63
Third Wave (1990s–early 2000s) ....................................................................................................... 64
Fourth Wave (2010s–present) ........................................................................................................... 65

Themes in feminist philosophy of science ....................................................................................65

Feminist Philosophy of Science (overview)....................................................................................65

The ideal of value-free science ....................................................................................................66
is science value-free? myth of value-freeness of science ................................................................. 66

Situated knowledge ...................................................................................................................67

Standpoint Theory......................................................................................................................68
José Medina ..................................................................................................................................... 68

Problems with (early) feminist PhilSci...........................................................................................69

Helen Longino on objectivity in science ........................................................................................70

What the paper does ..................................................................................................................70

Strategy 1: Critiques of Science Itself ...........................................................................................70

Strategy 2: Critiques of Philosophy of Science and Rationality .........................................................71

Strategy 3: Critiques of the Institutional and Social Structures of Science .........................................72

Longino’s concern .....................................................................................................................73

Rationality Is Socially Infused ......................................................................................................74

Longino’s Central Claim .............................................................................................................75
Longino’s Four Criteria for Objectivity (quoted from p. 267) .............................................................. 75

Longino summary ......................................................................................................................76

Criticising Longino’s account of objectivity ...................................................................................77
Emma’s point ................................................................................................................................... 77

Lecture 8 .....................................................................................................................................78

Exam style questions .................................................................................................................78

Metaphysics ................................................................................................................................81

Do atoms exist? .........................................................................................................................81
Does this answer our question? ....................................................................................................... 81

Realism & anti-realism ...............................................................................................................81
Is this not just idle talk? .................................................................................................................... 82
(Anti-)Realism about what? .............................................................................................................. 84
Theory (Anti-)Realism ....................................................................................................................... 85

Lecture 9 .....................................................................................................................................88

Key questions ............................................................................................................................88

Mind-Body Dualism: René Descartes (1596–1650) .........................................................................88




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