rem4:philosophy_of_science_i
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- | Spored teb moje i tei pesni da se selski,ama vseki petyk i satboa se razbivame na tqh i si pravim veseloto pak na tebe 6tom ne ti haresvat neznam ti ozib6to petyk,satboa izliza6 li nqkade da se zabavlqva6 ili si stoi6 vav vas i se naslajdavash na smislenite si pesni koito i da sa te. | + | |
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+ | =====Lecture Notes===== | ||
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+ | ====Concepts==== | ||
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+ | | Theory (Icel. kenning) | "A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena." | ||
+ | | Hypothesis (Icel. tilgáta) | ||
+ | | Data (Icel. gögn) | ||
+ | | Information (Icel. upplýsingar) | ||
+ | | Randomness | It is hypothesized in quantum physics that the universe may possibly be built on a truly random foundation, which means that some things are by their very nature unpredictable. Randomness in the aggregate, however, does seem to follow some predictable laws (c.f. the concept of "laws of probability" | ||
+ | | Sampling | ||
+ | | Empiricism | ||
+ | | Deduction (Icel. afleiðsla) | ||
+ | | Induction (Icel. aðleiðsla, | ||
+ | | Experiment | ||
+ | | Tautology (Icel. klifun, hringskýring) | A 2-part sentence where the second part sounds like a logical conclusion of the first part but is simply a restatement of it. \\ Example: "All Icleanders love shopping — because it's fun!" | | ||
+ | | The key to the advancement of scientific knowledge. | ||
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+ | ====Science: | ||
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+ | | Greek philosophers | ||
+ | | Roger Bacon \\ (1214 – 1294) | English philosopher. \\ One of the earliest proponents of the scientific method (empiricism). | | ||
+ | | Descartes \\ (1596 - 1650) | French philosopher. \\ Enormous influence on math (inventor of analytic geometry), science, philosophy of mind and philosophy in general. "I think, therefore I am." " | ||
+ | | Sir Francis Bacon \\ (1561 - 1626) | English philosopher. \\ Influential proponent of the scientific method. Emphasized induction as the main principle of scientific progress. | ||
+ | | Galileo Galilei \\ (1564 - 1642) | Italian philosopher and polymath. \\ Influence on the use of quantitative measurements and the use of math. | | ||
+ | | Karl Popper \\ (1902 - 1994) | Philosopher. Most famous for his claim that theories can only be tested through the falsification of hypotheses. \\ Book: The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1959) | | ||
+ | | Thomas Kuhn \\ (1922 - 1996) | Philosopher. Most famous for his theory of scientific change as intermittent challenges to the status quo. \\ Book: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) | | ||
+ | | Imre Lakatos \\ (1922 - 1974) | Philosopher. Proposed a " | ||
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+ | ====Falsification of Hypotheses==== | ||
+ | | Very powerful method | ||
+ | | Problem | ||
+ | | Theories in flux | Counter to what many think, theories almost never pop out complete and finished. The become assembled piece by piece, until there are so few pieces left that someone figures out the full picture. In the mean time, however, it is easy to falisfy hypotheses based on the theory, which, in the early stages, may not be much of a theory. | | ||
+ | | Science builds theories | ||
+ | | Conclusion | ||
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+ | ====Why We Need Statistics & When to Use it==== | ||
+ | | When building theories: We go from the particular to the general | ||
+ | | Statistics are inappropriate in the early stages of scientific work | When we are trying to "wrap our brain around a problem" | ||
+ | | When to use statistics | ||
+ | | Randomness | ||
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+ | ====Why We Need Simulation and When to Use it==== | ||
+ | | Simulation | ||
+ | | Theories | ||
+ | | Relation between theories and simulations | ||
+ | | When to use simulation | ||
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+ | ==== The key to the advancement of scientific knowledge==== | ||
+ | | Theory: The coherent story | A scientific theory provides a consistent story explaining the causal relationships between a set of observable or hidden factors. The ability of individuals and groups to create coherent " | ||
+ | | Support of evidence | ||
+ | | Rigor | A theory is more rigorous than another if it includes more clear definitions, | ||
+ | | Creating hypotheses | ||
+ | | Creating experiments | ||
+ | | Executing experiments | ||
+ | | Interpreting results | ||
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+ | EOF |
/var/www/cadia.ru.is/wiki/data/attic/rem4/philosophy_of_science_i.1336275844.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/04/29 13:33 (external edit)