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Philosophy of science - summary all lecture notes 1-12

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Philosophy of Science – Final Exam Summary
Lecture 1 – Ways of knowing
 Three groups of sciences
1. Natural sciences (physics, chemistry, biology etc.)
2. Humanities (history, linguistics, literary studies, philosophy etc.)
3. Social sciences (sociology, political science, economics, psychology etc.)
o What humankind has come up with to understand the world.
 Natural Sciences
- Very influential: most ancient.
- Ancient intellectual endeavours.
o Astronomy arose in Babylonia, 1200 BCE.
o Modern natural sciences developed partly from Chinese, Indian, and
Islamic sources in the Middle Ages and Renaissance.
- “Scientific revolution”, Europe 1550-1700.
- Seems difficult, but also simple:
- Physical universe is uniform and simple.
- Natural sciences focus on universals and regularities.
o Example: phenomenon of free fall.
o Less interest in concrete historical particulars, such as the fall of this
stone, but interest in the category free fall.
- Standard techniques of theorising (all include zooming out):
o Mathematization, abstraction, idealization.
o Able to yield knowledge in concise, powerful forms.
- Example: laws of nature (highest category of scientific knowledge).
o Mathematical equations among physical quantities.
o Can be deep facts about universe as a whole. Few disciplines have laws
of nature.
- Laws as paradigms of knowledge.
o Taken to represent the highest grade of scientific knowledge.
o Even by many outside the natural sciences.
 Humanities
- In ancient and medieval education, the liberal arts were “ways of doing”
instead of ways of knowing (grammar, rhetoric, logic).
- Gradually, they developed into subjects of study (Renaissance humanism).
- Present-day humanities disciplines: history, history of art, studies of language
and literature, philosophy, religious studies.
- World studied by the humanities focuses on historical human actors.
- Historical actors are creative.
o They originate acts, texts artworks.
o Creation follows no rules – unpredictable and inexplicable.
o World is complicated – as opposed to natural sciences, whose world
follows rules, no surprises.
- Important methodological consequences…
- Historical particularity:
1

, o Every event and context is unique.
o We identify periods but then zoom in past these categories.
- Mistrust of generalisation and idealisation:
o Highest form of knowledge is intimate knowledge of particulars.
o Little or no use for scientific laws.
- Main output: interpretations.
o Of acts, texts, artworks.
o Often embedded in theoretical frameworks.
- Empathy, hermeneutics.
o We attempt to reconstruct the historical actor’s world of experiences
and meanings.
- Objectivity of interpretations.
o We test interpretations against the text or other material.

 Question
- How to…
Conceptualize the differences between natural sciences and humanities?
Analyse the diversity of the social sciences?
- Answer: using the concepts of nomothetic and idiographic approaches.

 Nomothetic approach
Consists in:
- Identifying regularities (patterns) in the world.
- Formulating generalisations and laws to describe these regularities.
- Deriving explanations of observed outcomes from these generalisations and
laws.
- Typical of the natural sciences.
- Strength: nomothetic approach can…
o Identify similarities and structures that underlie apparently diverse
cases (unifying approach, common pattern, generalise/general rules).
o Yield sweeping, general knowledge (zooming out).
o Yield economical knowledge (effortless).
- Weakness: nomothetic approach can…
o Erase the specificity of outcomes.
o Be reductive, mechanistic, positivistic.

 Idiographic approach
Consists in:
- Understanding the meaning of contingent, unique, and often subjective
outcomes.
- Typical of the humanities.
- Strength: idiographic approach can…
o Reveal differences between apparently similar cases.
o Yield detailed, context-sensitive knowledge (specify).
- Weakness: idiographic approach can…
2

, o Be blind to general factors that constrain outcomes.
Tension between these approaches: felt particularly in the social sciences.
 Social sciences
- Youngest group of disciplines.
- Originated in late-19th-century French and German debates on how to study
societies.
- Present-day disciplines: sociology, political science, economics, psychology,
anthropology.
- World of the social sciences contains:
o Human agents and institutions.
o Forms of behaviour.
o Rationality and ritual.
o Cultures.
- Social sciences feel the attraction of both natural science and humanities.
- Economic, demography.
o Largely nomothetic disciplines.
o Predominantly mathematical investigation.
- Cultural anthropology, political theory.
o Largely idiographic disciplines.
o Produce interpretations and ascribe meanings.
- Diversity even within single disciplines: e.g. psychology.
- Quantitative methods.
o Numerical data, testing of hypothesis.
- Qualitative methods.
o Participant observation, in-depth interviews.
Lecture 2 – Knowledge, Truth, and Facts
 Three forms of knowledge
1. Knowledge by acquaintance
o I know The Hague, how to navigate etc.
o I know my friends.
2. “How to” knowledge
o I know how to ride a bicycle.
o ‘Skills’ knowledge.
o Subtle and complicated, hard to write a manual (= not easy to translate
verbally).
3. Propositional knowledge
o I know that P (P = proposition, sentence/utterance).
o We focus on proposition knowledge in this lecture.

 Propositional Knowledge
- We regard propositional knowledge as the highest from of knowledge.
o It is knowledge of facts.


3

, o Important in science, in logical reasoning, in arguments.
- Each of us may claim many items of propositional knowledge.
o In various categories.


Knowledge that P (propositional knowledge): examples:
- Knowledge of observed objects.
I know that there is a door over there.
- Knowledge of future events.
I know that night will fall.
- Knowledge about mathematical facts.
I know that 7 + 5 = 12.
- Knowledge of conceptual relations.
I know that bachelors are unmarried men.

 What is knowledge?
- The JTB account of knowledge offers an answer to this question.
- It says that knowledge is nothing other than justified true belief.
- Plato first proposed this idea in his dialogue, circa 369 BCE.
- The JTC account analyses the statement “A knows that P.” (A= person, P=
proposition).

 K is JTB (knowledge is justified true belief)
- A knows that P if and only if:
1. P is true
2. A believes that P
3. A is justified in believing that P
Most important!
- This is the JTB account of knowledge.
o If conditions 1-3 hold, then A knows that P.
o If one or more conditions fail to hold, then this is not a case of
knowledge.

 JTC account: example
- Jo knows that it is raining if and only if:
1. “It is raining” is true – i.e. it is raining.
2. Jo believes that it is raining.
3. Jo is justified in believing that it is raining.
- These conditions specify the meaning of “Jo knows that it is raining” and the
circumstances in which we may legitimately assert this.

 What does the JTB account do?
- The JTC account of knowledge…
1. Is an example of conceptual analysis in philosophy.


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