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Summary SV philosophy of science (slides + volledige lesnotities + inhoudstafel)

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109
Publié le
21-01-2026
Écrit en
2025/2026

Dit vak is nieuw dit jaar! Er zijn al zo'n 40 mensen die deze SV hebben gekocht via . Kleurencode in mijn samenvatting (normaal gezien fluoresceer ik mijn SV niet op voorhand maar voor een open boek examen leek mij dit handig) - blauw: belangrijkste termen (EXAMEN) - geel: kerngedachtes, belangrijke zaken - groen: namen De zelfstudie artikels staan er jammer genoeg niet in maar ik heb gezien dat er hier al samenvattingen van circuleren. Tip voor control F gebruik op het examen bij bv incommensurability dan typ ik niet het volledige woord omdat dit soms in verschillende vormen in mijn SV staat bv incommensurable dus dan typ ik: incommens en dan komen alle resultaten er op. Mijn SV is vooral in het Engels omdat het vak in het Engels wordt gegeven maar als het te moeilijk is dan heb ik er Nederlandse uitleg bij geschreven.

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Publié le
21 janvier 2026
Nombre de pages
109
Écrit en
2025/2026
Type
Resume

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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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