[[public:t-701-rem4-20-1:rem4-20-lecturenotes|<-BACK to REM4-20 Lecture Notes]] ---------- Due to lines being cropped off at the top of some pages I have inserted notes with the full sentence. If you don't see my notes when you open your pdf copy, try another pdf reader. If the problem persists, I am including these problem sentences here: \\ \\ | PAGE | MISSING TEXT | | 20 | The latter disciplines constitute a study of science as an activity, as one social phenomenon among many. \\ | | 21 | (1) The formal sciences: logic and mathematics. Logic and math are often referred to as sciences. \\ | | 22 | From these examples of (some of) the activities of scientists and philosophers of science, ... \\ | | 30 | ...is, second, the application of the factual sciences to the applied sciences. \\ | | 32 | ... enterprise, discipline, or theory is scientific if it is characterized by or meets those criteria.\\ | | 34 | ...to account for those phenomena or by which to resolve the problem; ( c) the deriving (from (b)) ... \\ | | 36 | ... of demarkation from the problem of meaning and maintains that the latter is a pseudoproblem. \\ | | 40 | ...ences, had in fact more in common with primitive myths than with science; that they resembled astrology rather than astronomy. \\ | | 42 | (5) Every genuine test of a theory is an attempt to falsify it, or to refute it. Testability is falsifiability; but ... \\ | | 46 | ...which he does not even attempt to formulate; which he vaguely describes as a “code or rule of craft” ... \\ | | 318 | ...be said that it was rather hypothetical. A theoreticalk law is not to be distingushed from an empirical law … \\ | | 319 | ...that we are now speaking of observables. We must introduce a theory — ... \\ | \\ \\ \\ EOF