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Science and society: How science affects society and vice versa Issues to bring to bear: Theory-ladenness of observation Ruling out the logic of discovery? The logic of justification: problems The problem of induction (both narrow and sophisticated) Problems with falsificationism Duhem: the role of theory Hempel: the role of auxiliary assumptions and whether the relevant conditions are met The nature of explanation Formal model (Hempel) The pragmatic model (van Fraassen) Issues to bring to bear: Theory-ladenness of observation Ruling out the logic of discovery? The logic of justification: problems The problem of induction (both narrow and sophisticated) Problems with falsificationism Duhem: the role of theory Hempel: the role of auxiliary assumptions and whether the relevant conditions are met The nature of explanation Formal model (Hempel) The pragmatic model (van Fraassen)
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Science and society: How science affects society and vice versa Science affecting society In the courts: Laudan v. Ruse Union of Concerned Scientists Research into non-human primates (Bonobos and chimps) that affects human self-perception Society affecting science: Gould articles “Women’s Brains”: numbers in and of themselves mean nothing; women’s battles are all of ours “Wide Hats and Narrow Minds”: “If we laugh with derision, we will never understand…” Science affecting society In the courts: Laudan v. Ruse Union of Concerned Scientists Research into non-human primates (Bonobos and chimps) that affects human self-perception Society affecting science: Gould articles “Women’s Brains”: numbers in and of themselves mean nothing; women’s battles are all of ours “Wide Hats and Narrow Minds”: “If we laugh with derision, we will never understand…”
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Science and society: How science affects society and vice versa Society affecting science and vice versa: Sociobiology Sociobiology: E.O. Wilson, genetics, Harvard Sociobiology (1975); On Human Nature (1977) Genes (the product of natural selection) Human Behavior Human societies Gould: Adaptationism (natural selection explains all things) and story telling in Sociobiology Caplan: turf wars; response to Gould et al criticisms of “just so stories”; these critiques based on a misunderstanding of “natural selection” Society affecting science and vice versa: Sociobiology Sociobiology: E.O. Wilson, genetics, Harvard Sociobiology (1975); On Human Nature (1977) Genes (the product of natural selection) Human Behavior Human societies Gould: Adaptationism (natural selection explains all things) and story telling in Sociobiology Caplan: turf wars; response to Gould et al criticisms of “just so stories”; these critiques based on a misunderstanding of “natural selection”
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Science and society: How science affects society and vice versa The “ethics” of science The case of “Genie” Testing “the critical period hypothesis” What did Genie need? What did Genie get? Researchers v. caregivers Weighing “knowledge for its own sake” v. what knowledge should we seek and how? The “ethics” of science The case of “Genie” Testing “the critical period hypothesis” What did Genie need? What did Genie get? Researchers v. caregivers Weighing “knowledge for its own sake” v. what knowledge should we seek and how?
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