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What is Scientific Realism?
An explication of the metaphysical, semantic, and epistemic commitments of scientific realism
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John Wilkins - Scientific Realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take...
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7 - 4 - Part Four - Scientific Realism and the No Miracles Argument (0331)
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Scientific Realism Day05 - Clip01
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
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Kitcher Scientific Realism
Kitcher's criticisms of van Fraassen's antirealism
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The Fabric of Gender | Part 2: Scientific Realism
PART 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5VfB2HMLj4
Please read the description & be polite. Share if you like this video.
Part two of an animated video essay that tries to answer whether there is a biological basis for gender.
It is loosely based on the debate between Steven Pinker & Elizabeth Spelke held at Harvard University in 2005.
REFERENCES:
http://milanvuckovic.com/References-in-The-Fabr
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MindChunk: Scientific Realism, AntiRealism, and Consciousness
What makes a theoretical posit real? And what makes some posits fundamental to a scientific theory? Could consciousness be one of the fundamental elements of a scientific theory? Philosophy professors Richard Brown and Pete Mandik tackle these questions at greater length in Episode 3 of the SpaceTimeMind podcast. http://www.spacetimemind.com/blog/2014/4/14/episode-3-consciousness-explained-part-2-
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Panel on Scientific Realism
Martin Curd Mathias Frisch Michel Ghins.
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Scientific realism and proofs of God
This video looks at the parallels between scientific realism and proofs of God.
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Carnap on the Scientific Realism Debate
Paul Dicken (Cambridge) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Tolerance & Voluntarism". Abstract: Carnap's dissolution of the scientific realis...
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Carnap on Realism & Instrumentalism
Michael Friedman (Stanford) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Carnap's Logico-Mathematical Neutrality between Realism and Instrumentalism"....
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UQx META101x 3.5.1.2 Scientific Realism
If you would like to go to UQx's 'Philosophy and Critical Thinking' free online course on edX click https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:UQx+META101x+3T2015/info
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Scientific Realism as an Historical Thesis - Prof Stathis Psillos
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Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip02
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
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"Scientific Realism and the Simulation Argument" by Adam Davis
The 2012 conference of the Mormon Transhumanist Association was held on 6 April 2012 from 9am to 5pm at the Salt Lake City Public Library in Salt Lake City, ...
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Realism and anti-realism I: Absolutism and relativism
This is the first tutorial on the realism debate. "Realists" believe that some "reality" exists independently of our mind or our thinking about this reality....
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Is Maths Real? Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker, Hilary Lawson on Scientific Realism
Is Maths Real? Watch the full debate at: http://iai.tv/video/pythagoras-dream with Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker & Hilary Lawson on scientific realism and the rea...
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Scientific realism and the history of experimentation - Prof Theodore Arabatzis
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Quo Vadis Selective Scientific Realism - Dr Peter Vickers
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Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip03
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
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Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip05
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
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Nominalism and Realism Volume 1 Universals and Scientific Realism Universals Scientific Realism
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Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip04
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
What is Scientific Realism?
An explication of the metaphysical, semantic, and epistemic commitments of scientific realism...
An explication of the metaphysical, semantic, and epistemic commitments of scientific realism
wn.com/What Is Scientific Realism
An explication of the metaphysical, semantic, and epistemic commitments of scientific realism
- published: 18 Oct 2015
- views: 191
John Wilkins - Scientific Realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take......
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take...
wn.com/John Wilkins Scientific Realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take...
- published: 15 Aug 2014
- views: 844
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author: Adam Ford
Scientific Realism Day05 - Clip01
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012....
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
wn.com/Scientific Realism Day05 Clip01
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
- published: 21 Apr 2012
- views: 416
-
author: ucscmedia
Kitcher Scientific Realism
Kitcher's criticisms of van Fraassen's antirealism...
Kitcher's criticisms of van Fraassen's antirealism
wn.com/Kitcher Scientific Realism
Kitcher's criticisms of van Fraassen's antirealism
- published: 24 Feb 2014
- views: 63
The Fabric of Gender | Part 2: Scientific Realism
PART 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5VfB2HMLj4
Please read the description & be polite. Share if you like this video.
Part two of an animated video essay ...
PART 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5VfB2HMLj4
Please read the description & be polite. Share if you like this video.
Part two of an animated video essay that tries to answer whether there is a biological basis for gender.
It is loosely based on the debate between Steven Pinker & Elizabeth Spelke held at Harvard University in 2005.
REFERENCES:
http://milanvuckovic.com/References-in-The-Fabric-of-Gender
CREDITS:
Copyediting by my lovely sister Jelena Vuckovic
Narrated by Natascha Szabo
Music by http://musicincloud.com
Illustration, Animation, Writing by me.
Website: http://www.milanvuckovic.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Wukish
wn.com/The Fabric Of Gender | Part 2 Scientific Realism
PART 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5VfB2HMLj4
Please read the description & be polite. Share if you like this video.
Part two of an animated video essay that tries to answer whether there is a biological basis for gender.
It is loosely based on the debate between Steven Pinker & Elizabeth Spelke held at Harvard University in 2005.
REFERENCES:
http://milanvuckovic.com/References-in-The-Fabric-of-Gender
CREDITS:
Copyediting by my lovely sister Jelena Vuckovic
Narrated by Natascha Szabo
Music by http://musicincloud.com
Illustration, Animation, Writing by me.
Website: http://www.milanvuckovic.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Wukish
- published: 19 Oct 2015
- views: 854
MindChunk: Scientific Realism, AntiRealism, and Consciousness
What makes a theoretical posit real? And what makes some posits fundamental to a scientific theory? Could consciousness be one of the fundamental elements of a ...
What makes a theoretical posit real? And what makes some posits fundamental to a scientific theory? Could consciousness be one of the fundamental elements of a scientific theory? Philosophy professors Richard Brown and Pete Mandik tackle these questions at greater length in Episode 3 of the SpaceTimeMind podcast. http://www.spacetimemind.com/blog/2014/4/14/episode-3-consciousness-explained-part-2-the-nature-of-explanation
wn.com/Mindchunk Scientific Realism, Antirealism, And Consciousness
What makes a theoretical posit real? And what makes some posits fundamental to a scientific theory? Could consciousness be one of the fundamental elements of a scientific theory? Philosophy professors Richard Brown and Pete Mandik tackle these questions at greater length in Episode 3 of the SpaceTimeMind podcast. http://www.spacetimemind.com/blog/2014/4/14/episode-3-consciousness-explained-part-2-the-nature-of-explanation
- published: 06 Jun 2014
- views: 20
Panel on Scientific Realism
Martin Curd Mathias Frisch Michel Ghins....
Martin Curd Mathias Frisch Michel Ghins.
wn.com/Panel On Scientific Realism
Martin Curd Mathias Frisch Michel Ghins.
Scientific realism and proofs of God
This video looks at the parallels between scientific realism and proofs of God....
This video looks at the parallels between scientific realism and proofs of God.
wn.com/Scientific Realism And Proofs Of God
This video looks at the parallels between scientific realism and proofs of God.
Carnap on the Scientific Realism Debate
Paul Dicken (Cambridge) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Tolerance & Voluntarism". Abstract: Carnap's dissolution of the scientific realis......
Paul Dicken (Cambridge) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Tolerance & Voluntarism". Abstract: Carnap's dissolution of the scientific realis...
wn.com/Carnap On The Scientific Realism Debate
Paul Dicken (Cambridge) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Tolerance & Voluntarism". Abstract: Carnap's dissolution of the scientific realis...
Carnap on Realism & Instrumentalism
Michael Friedman (Stanford) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Carnap's Logico-Mathematical Neutrality between Realism and Instrumentalism".......
Michael Friedman (Stanford) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Carnap's Logico-Mathematical Neutrality between Realism and Instrumentalism"....
wn.com/Carnap On Realism Instrumentalism
Michael Friedman (Stanford) gives a talk at the MCMP Workshop on Carnap titled "Carnap's Logico-Mathematical Neutrality between Realism and Instrumentalism"....
UQx META101x 3.5.1.2 Scientific Realism
If you would like to go to UQx's 'Philosophy and Critical Thinking' free online course on edX click https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:UQx+META101x+3T20...
If you would like to go to UQx's 'Philosophy and Critical Thinking' free online course on edX click https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:UQx+META101x+3T2015/info
wn.com/Uqx Meta101X 3.5.1.2 Scientific Realism
If you would like to go to UQx's 'Philosophy and Critical Thinking' free online course on edX click https://courses.edx.org/courses/course-v1:UQx+META101x+3T2015/info
- published: 08 Dec 2015
- views: 38
Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip02
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012....
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
wn.com/Scientific Realism Day 05 Clip02
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
- published: 21 Apr 2012
- views: 169
-
author: ucscmedia
"Scientific Realism and the Simulation Argument" by Adam Davis
The 2012 conference of the Mormon Transhumanist Association was held on 6 April 2012 from 9am to 5pm at the Salt Lake City Public Library in Salt Lake City, ......
The 2012 conference of the Mormon Transhumanist Association was held on 6 April 2012 from 9am to 5pm at the Salt Lake City Public Library in Salt Lake City, ...
wn.com/Scientific Realism And The Simulation Argument By Adam Davis
The 2012 conference of the Mormon Transhumanist Association was held on 6 April 2012 from 9am to 5pm at the Salt Lake City Public Library in Salt Lake City, ...
Realism and anti-realism I: Absolutism and relativism
This is the first tutorial on the realism debate. "Realists" believe that some "reality" exists independently of our mind or our thinking about this reality.......
This is the first tutorial on the realism debate. "Realists" believe that some "reality" exists independently of our mind or our thinking about this reality....
wn.com/Realism And Anti Realism I Absolutism And Relativism
This is the first tutorial on the realism debate. "Realists" believe that some "reality" exists independently of our mind or our thinking about this reality....
Is Maths Real? Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker, Hilary Lawson on Scientific Realism
Is Maths Real? Watch the full debate at: http://iai.tv/video/pythagoras-dream with Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker & Hilary Lawson on scientific realism and the rea......
Is Maths Real? Watch the full debate at: http://iai.tv/video/pythagoras-dream with Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker & Hilary Lawson on scientific realism and the rea...
wn.com/Is Maths Real Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker, Hilary Lawson On Scientific Realism
Is Maths Real? Watch the full debate at: http://iai.tv/video/pythagoras-dream with Lee Smolin, Peter Hacker & Hilary Lawson on scientific realism and the rea...
- published: 04 Oct 2012
- views: 815
-
author: IAITV
Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip03
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012....
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
wn.com/Scientific Realism Day 05 Clip03
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
- published: 21 Apr 2012
- views: 112
-
author: ucscmedia
Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip05
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012....
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
wn.com/Scientific Realism Day 05 Clip05
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
- published: 21 Apr 2012
- views: 77
-
author: ucscmedia
Scientific Realism Day 05 - Clip04
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012....
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
wn.com/Scientific Realism Day 05 Clip04
Philosophy of Science Guest Lecture Series by Dr. Michael Arnold on 28th March 2012.
- published: 21 Apr 2012
- views: 74
-
author: ucscmedia
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Scientific Realism in Studies of Reading
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A Theory of Universals Volume 2 Universals and Scientific Realism Universals Scientific Realism
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A Metaphysics for Scientific Realism Knowing the Unobservable
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Scientific realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what it might be taken to be. Within philosophy of science, it is often framed as an answer to the question "how is the success of science to be explained?" The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of unobservable ent
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HPS100 Lecture 05: Scientific Progress
Do our best theories correctly describe the external world? Is there scientific progress?
00:30 Scientific Realism vs. Scientific Anti-Realism
04:57 Two Versions of Scientific Realism
___ 05:20 Structural Realism
___ 08:14 Entity Realism
___ 09:32 Contra Structural Realism
___ 13:30 Contra Entity Realism
___ 16:52 Selective Scientific Realism vs. Fallibilism
20:10 Changing the Question: Is there
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Two Coherent Notions of Scientific Realism
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Fym - Science Realism
LOW BITRATE (96kbps). Follow Telegraph Records: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Telegraph-Records/103805946324796
Buy Record: http://www.discogs.com/Fym-Monkey-Styler-EP/release/190167
More Music: https://www.facebook.com/DoFunkk
I do not own the rights of anything uploaded and broadcasted form this channel.
Copyright holder?
Please message me, comment below or email me to dofunkk.channe
-
Cormac McCarthy on scientific realism
Cormac McCarthy discusses science in this clip from the closing credits of "The Unbelievers" documentary film (2013).
-
"Castle On The Wind"
You deny the foundations while living in the house
The structure is simply to good to live without
It holds the killers and the bandits at bay
And keeps out the wind and the driving rain
You trample the ancient suppositions
Appropriately they're under your feet
They have no place in scientific realism
Such articles of faith are simply naive
The homeless philosophers on the other hand
They blew
-
Science & the Preservation of Reliability
Bryson Brown (Lethbridge) gives a talk at the Conference on Paraconsistent Reasoning in Science and Mathematics titled "On the Preservation of Reliability". Abstract: All models are wrong, but some are useful. C.S. Peirce examined several broad methods for arriving at beliefs in “On the Fixation of Belief”; the central theme of his essay is the importance of having a method that leads to stable ag
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One Giant Leap for Climate Realism
Why would an Apollo Astronaut come out of retirement to jump off a cliff in Peru?
For Apollo 7 astronaut Walt Cunningham, calling attention to the “sorry way” that climate science and policy have been distorted is an important reason.
Walt came to the UN climate conference in Peru (COP 20) as part of the official CFACT delegation to issue a call for political leaders and the media to return to “
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For Real Segment on "Dailies" (for Reelz Channel)
We produced fun pop-culture-vs-science signature segments called "For Real?" for Dailies, an entertainment news program on Reelz Channel. Each segment explored the scientific realism of popular new movie releases, which included (at the time) Into the Wild, Fred Claus, Beowulf, I Am Legend, National Treasure: Book of Secrets, and many more.
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John Wilkins - Map & Territory
Also see 'Scientific Realism': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8MMPkA9LgI
"Our Theories Die in our Stead" - Popper - Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
Science, Technology & the Future: http://scifuture.org
Humanity+: http://humanityplus.org
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6.4. INTROPHIL - Scientific Realism and the No Miracles Argument
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course.
Dr Michela Massimi
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences
University of Edinburgh
Licence: CC-BY-NC
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
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6.5. INTROPHIL - Scientific Anti Realism Constructive Empiricism
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course. Dr Michela Massimi School of Philosophy, Psychology an...
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Bas van Fraassen: The Semantic Approach to Science, After 50 Years
The 1960s saw many revolutions, worldwide, and some of that epoch's revolutionary spirit manifested itself in philosophy of science, with strong reactions ag...
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Interview with James Robert Brown
March 20, 2014 Dr. James Robert Brown, University of Toronto Dalhousie University Interviewed by Izzy Morin Guest: James Robert Brown is a professor of philo...
Scientific realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what it might be take...
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what it might be taken to be. Within philosophy of science, it is often framed as an answer to the question "how is the success of science to be explained?" The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of unobservable entities apparently talked about by scientific theories. Generally, those who are scientific realists assert that one can make valid claims about unobservables as observables, as opposed to instrumentalism.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
wn.com/Scientific Realism
Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what it might be taken to be. Within philosophy of science, it is often framed as an answer to the question "how is the success of science to be explained?" The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of unobservable entities apparently talked about by scientific theories. Generally, those who are scientific realists assert that one can make valid claims about unobservables as observables, as opposed to instrumentalism.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
- published: 01 Nov 2015
- views: 0
HPS100 Lecture 05: Scientific Progress
Do our best theories correctly describe the external world? Is there scientific progress?
00:30 Scientific Realism vs. Scientific Anti-Realism
04:57 Two Versi...
Do our best theories correctly describe the external world? Is there scientific progress?
00:30 Scientific Realism vs. Scientific Anti-Realism
04:57 Two Versions of Scientific Realism
___ 05:20 Structural Realism
___ 08:14 Entity Realism
___ 09:32 Contra Structural Realism
___ 13:30 Contra Entity Realism
___ 16:52 Selective Scientific Realism vs. Fallibilism
20:10 Changing the Question: Is there Scientific Progress?
21:40 Progress in Music, Art, and Sport
26:53 Progress in Science
30:32 Progress Thesis vs. No-Progress Thesis
32:40 The Problem of Progress in the TSC
37:00 No-Miracles Argument
41:23 Pessimistic Induction Argument
___ 53:26 The Pessimistic Induction Argument Debunked
56:00 Summary: Progress Thesis vs. No-Progress Thesis
You can access the slideshow here http://1drv.ms/1P40398
Enroll in HPS100 Introductory History and Philosophy of Science at http://www.rosi.utoronto.ca/
My name is Hakob Barseghyan. I teach history and philosophy of science at the IHPST, University of Toronto. It is my goal to help my students appreciate how fascinating both the history and philosophy of science are. HPS100 is my introductory course on history and philosophy of science; it is offered online in both Fall and Winter terms.
The course is funded by University of Toronto, Online Learning Strategies (http://onlinelearning.utoronto.ca/) and the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology (http://www.hps.utoronto.ca/)
Watch in HD 1080 for the best quality.
To learn more about the Laws of Scientific Change, please check out Hakob's book: http://www.springer.com/book/9783319175959
wn.com/Hps100 Lecture 05 Scientific Progress
Do our best theories correctly describe the external world? Is there scientific progress?
00:30 Scientific Realism vs. Scientific Anti-Realism
04:57 Two Versions of Scientific Realism
___ 05:20 Structural Realism
___ 08:14 Entity Realism
___ 09:32 Contra Structural Realism
___ 13:30 Contra Entity Realism
___ 16:52 Selective Scientific Realism vs. Fallibilism
20:10 Changing the Question: Is there Scientific Progress?
21:40 Progress in Music, Art, and Sport
26:53 Progress in Science
30:32 Progress Thesis vs. No-Progress Thesis
32:40 The Problem of Progress in the TSC
37:00 No-Miracles Argument
41:23 Pessimistic Induction Argument
___ 53:26 The Pessimistic Induction Argument Debunked
56:00 Summary: Progress Thesis vs. No-Progress Thesis
You can access the slideshow here http://1drv.ms/1P40398
Enroll in HPS100 Introductory History and Philosophy of Science at http://www.rosi.utoronto.ca/
My name is Hakob Barseghyan. I teach history and philosophy of science at the IHPST, University of Toronto. It is my goal to help my students appreciate how fascinating both the history and philosophy of science are. HPS100 is my introductory course on history and philosophy of science; it is offered online in both Fall and Winter terms.
The course is funded by University of Toronto, Online Learning Strategies (http://onlinelearning.utoronto.ca/) and the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology (http://www.hps.utoronto.ca/)
Watch in HD 1080 for the best quality.
To learn more about the Laws of Scientific Change, please check out Hakob's book: http://www.springer.com/book/9783319175959
- published: 09 Oct 2015
- views: 38
Fym - Science Realism
LOW BITRATE (96kbps). Follow Telegraph Records: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Telegraph-Records/103805946324796
Buy Record: http://www.discogs.com/Fym-Monkey-...
LOW BITRATE (96kbps). Follow Telegraph Records: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Telegraph-Records/103805946324796
Buy Record: http://www.discogs.com/Fym-Monkey-Styler-EP/release/190167
More Music: https://www.facebook.com/DoFunkk
I do not own the rights of anything uploaded and broadcasted form this channel.
Copyright holder?
Please message me, comment below or email me to dofunkk.channel2@gmail.com before sending a strike. I always remove everything I am requested to remove within 10 min of receiving a message.
This would prevent this channel to close after the strike and would allow music lovers and record diggers find some fantastic music which they more likely buy in record stores, second hand shops and discos.
Credit to artists, label, and purchase links are given in each upload to facilitate the listeners getting in touch to their favourite labels, artists and stores.
Every track has been compressed to a LOW BITRATE (96kbps) to avoid any kind of piracy and youtube rips.
wn.com/Fym Science Realism
LOW BITRATE (96kbps). Follow Telegraph Records: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Telegraph-Records/103805946324796
Buy Record: http://www.discogs.com/Fym-Monkey-Styler-EP/release/190167
More Music: https://www.facebook.com/DoFunkk
I do not own the rights of anything uploaded and broadcasted form this channel.
Copyright holder?
Please message me, comment below or email me to dofunkk.channel2@gmail.com before sending a strike. I always remove everything I am requested to remove within 10 min of receiving a message.
This would prevent this channel to close after the strike and would allow music lovers and record diggers find some fantastic music which they more likely buy in record stores, second hand shops and discos.
Credit to artists, label, and purchase links are given in each upload to facilitate the listeners getting in touch to their favourite labels, artists and stores.
Every track has been compressed to a LOW BITRATE (96kbps) to avoid any kind of piracy and youtube rips.
- published: 15 Aug 2015
- views: 158
Cormac McCarthy on scientific realism
Cormac McCarthy discusses science in this clip from the closing credits of "The Unbelievers" documentary film (2013)....
Cormac McCarthy discusses science in this clip from the closing credits of "The Unbelievers" documentary film (2013).
wn.com/Cormac Mccarthy On Scientific Realism
Cormac McCarthy discusses science in this clip from the closing credits of "The Unbelievers" documentary film (2013).
- published: 29 Jul 2015
- views: 25
"Castle On The Wind"
You deny the foundations while living in the house
The structure is simply to good to live without
It holds the killers and the bandits at bay
And keeps out the...
You deny the foundations while living in the house
The structure is simply to good to live without
It holds the killers and the bandits at bay
And keeps out the wind and the driving rain
You trample the ancient suppositions
Appropriately they're under your feet
They have no place in scientific realism
Such articles of faith are simply naive
The homeless philosophers on the other hand
They blew up the foundation and the building tumbled down
Now they squat in shanties, haunted and abandon
While trying to conceive how to construct a castle on wind
Music, Lyrics and Photo by John Martindale
wn.com/Castle On The Wind
You deny the foundations while living in the house
The structure is simply to good to live without
It holds the killers and the bandits at bay
And keeps out the wind and the driving rain
You trample the ancient suppositions
Appropriately they're under your feet
They have no place in scientific realism
Such articles of faith are simply naive
The homeless philosophers on the other hand
They blew up the foundation and the building tumbled down
Now they squat in shanties, haunted and abandon
While trying to conceive how to construct a castle on wind
Music, Lyrics and Photo by John Martindale
- published: 13 May 2015
- views: 35
Science & the Preservation of Reliability
Bryson Brown (Lethbridge) gives a talk at the Conference on Paraconsistent Reasoning in Science and Mathematics titled "On the Preservation of Reliability". Abs...
Bryson Brown (Lethbridge) gives a talk at the Conference on Paraconsistent Reasoning in Science and Mathematics titled "On the Preservation of Reliability". Abstract: All models are wrong, but some are useful. C.S. Peirce examined several broad methods for arriving at beliefs in “On the Fixation of Belief”; the central theme of his essay is the importance of having a method that leads to stable agreement amongst the members of a society. Peirce argues that the scientific method meets this standard, generalizing Hobbes’ observation that Harvey’s hypothesis of the circulation of the blood is an important example of a once-controversial view that came to be accepted even by those who initially rejected it, and a demonstration of the special epistemic success of science, in contrast with other forms of inquiry. But stable agreements are sometimes overturned. The brilliant, wide-ranging successes of classical physics made the basic principles of Newton’s theory laws of nature in the eyes of physicists, philosophers and the educated public. Yet they have been superseded by new principles. This pattern of success followed by failure and replacement is the key premise of Laudan’s pessimistic induction argument against scientific realism. Yet we have confidence, often justified confidence, in many scientific inferences, including inferences that begin with models and theoretical principles known to be false. Though the equations used and descriptions of actual systems our models are applied to are false, the results of the calculations (even when only approximate) are considered reliable for many purposes, and with good reason. Thus models provided by orbital mechanics are used to place probes in desired orbits and even land on other planets, while atmospheric GCMs are used to estimate large-scale climate changes likely to occur given various scenarios for human GHG emissions. Neither the equations used nor the descriptions of the systems such models include are true; the results of the calculations (even assuming the calculations are exact) cannot reasonably be taken to be true, either. Yet we do rely on them, and with good reason. Many measurable physical quantities that models allow us to calculate values for turn out to be very close to the results of actual observations under a wide range of specifiable conditions. This paper develops a pragmatic view of theories, models and the inferences we use our models and theories to make. The preservation of reliability allows for the use of incompatible theories and principles in our inferences, along with contextually-determined levels of acceptable approximation, and conceptual shifts in how measurement results are interpreted in the light of the different principles relied on at different points. But it is also compatible with a modest scientific realism: the criteria by which we decide when a theory can be relied on generally include measurable parameters whose values, even though our understanding of them remains imperfect, reliably indicate when and to what extent a given theory is reliable and constitutes reliably settled science in a sense that Peirce might have found satisfying even without an accepted background theory in which we can explain both that reliability and its limits.
wn.com/Science The Preservation Of Reliability
Bryson Brown (Lethbridge) gives a talk at the Conference on Paraconsistent Reasoning in Science and Mathematics titled "On the Preservation of Reliability". Abstract: All models are wrong, but some are useful. C.S. Peirce examined several broad methods for arriving at beliefs in “On the Fixation of Belief”; the central theme of his essay is the importance of having a method that leads to stable agreement amongst the members of a society. Peirce argues that the scientific method meets this standard, generalizing Hobbes’ observation that Harvey’s hypothesis of the circulation of the blood is an important example of a once-controversial view that came to be accepted even by those who initially rejected it, and a demonstration of the special epistemic success of science, in contrast with other forms of inquiry. But stable agreements are sometimes overturned. The brilliant, wide-ranging successes of classical physics made the basic principles of Newton’s theory laws of nature in the eyes of physicists, philosophers and the educated public. Yet they have been superseded by new principles. This pattern of success followed by failure and replacement is the key premise of Laudan’s pessimistic induction argument against scientific realism. Yet we have confidence, often justified confidence, in many scientific inferences, including inferences that begin with models and theoretical principles known to be false. Though the equations used and descriptions of actual systems our models are applied to are false, the results of the calculations (even when only approximate) are considered reliable for many purposes, and with good reason. Thus models provided by orbital mechanics are used to place probes in desired orbits and even land on other planets, while atmospheric GCMs are used to estimate large-scale climate changes likely to occur given various scenarios for human GHG emissions. Neither the equations used nor the descriptions of the systems such models include are true; the results of the calculations (even assuming the calculations are exact) cannot reasonably be taken to be true, either. Yet we do rely on them, and with good reason. Many measurable physical quantities that models allow us to calculate values for turn out to be very close to the results of actual observations under a wide range of specifiable conditions. This paper develops a pragmatic view of theories, models and the inferences we use our models and theories to make. The preservation of reliability allows for the use of incompatible theories and principles in our inferences, along with contextually-determined levels of acceptable approximation, and conceptual shifts in how measurement results are interpreted in the light of the different principles relied on at different points. But it is also compatible with a modest scientific realism: the criteria by which we decide when a theory can be relied on generally include measurable parameters whose values, even though our understanding of them remains imperfect, reliably indicate when and to what extent a given theory is reliable and constitutes reliably settled science in a sense that Peirce might have found satisfying even without an accepted background theory in which we can explain both that reliability and its limits.
- published: 28 Feb 2015
- views: 91
One Giant Leap for Climate Realism
Why would an Apollo Astronaut come out of retirement to jump off a cliff in Peru?
For Apollo 7 astronaut Walt Cunningham, calling attention to the “sorry way” ...
Why would an Apollo Astronaut come out of retirement to jump off a cliff in Peru?
For Apollo 7 astronaut Walt Cunningham, calling attention to the “sorry way” that climate science and policy have been distorted is an important reason.
Walt came to the UN climate conference in Peru (COP 20) as part of the official CFACT delegation to issue a call for political leaders and the media to return to “scientific realism” on global warming. Cunningham was part of the three member Apollo VII crew which in 1968 became NASA’s first manned space mission after the loss of the three astronauts of Apollo I to a tragic fire on the ground.
- See more at: http://www.cfact.org/2014/12/07/apollo-astronaut-takes-giant-leap-for-climate-realism-in-peru/#sthash.ZzpnVxd8.dpuf
wn.com/One Giant Leap For Climate Realism
Why would an Apollo Astronaut come out of retirement to jump off a cliff in Peru?
For Apollo 7 astronaut Walt Cunningham, calling attention to the “sorry way” that climate science and policy have been distorted is an important reason.
Walt came to the UN climate conference in Peru (COP 20) as part of the official CFACT delegation to issue a call for political leaders and the media to return to “scientific realism” on global warming. Cunningham was part of the three member Apollo VII crew which in 1968 became NASA’s first manned space mission after the loss of the three astronauts of Apollo I to a tragic fire on the ground.
- See more at: http://www.cfact.org/2014/12/07/apollo-astronaut-takes-giant-leap-for-climate-realism-in-peru/#sthash.ZzpnVxd8.dpuf
- published: 11 Dec 2014
- views: 843
For Real Segment on "Dailies" (for Reelz Channel)
We produced fun pop-culture-vs-science signature segments called "For Real?" for Dailies, an entertainment news program on Reelz Channel. Each segment explored ...
We produced fun pop-culture-vs-science signature segments called "For Real?" for Dailies, an entertainment news program on Reelz Channel. Each segment explored the scientific realism of popular new movie releases, which included (at the time) Into the Wild, Fred Claus, Beowulf, I Am Legend, National Treasure: Book of Secrets, and many more.
wn.com/For Real Segment On Dailies (For Reelz Channel)
We produced fun pop-culture-vs-science signature segments called "For Real?" for Dailies, an entertainment news program on Reelz Channel. Each segment explored the scientific realism of popular new movie releases, which included (at the time) Into the Wild, Fred Claus, Beowulf, I Am Legend, National Treasure: Book of Secrets, and many more.
- published: 30 Oct 2014
- views: 4
John Wilkins - Map & Territory
Also see 'Scientific Realism': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8MMPkA9LgI
"Our Theories Die in our Stead" - Popper - Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube....
Also see 'Scientific Realism': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8MMPkA9LgI
"Our Theories Die in our Stead" - Popper - Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
Science, Technology & the Future: http://scifuture.org
Humanity+: http://humanityplus.org
wn.com/John Wilkins Map Territory
Also see 'Scientific Realism': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8MMPkA9LgI
"Our Theories Die in our Stead" - Popper - Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
Science, Technology & the Future: http://scifuture.org
Humanity+: http://humanityplus.org
- published: 17 Aug 2014
- views: 38
6.4. INTROPHIL - Scientific Realism and the No Miracles Argument
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course.
Dr Michela Massimi
School of Philosophy, Psychology and ...
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course.
Dr Michela Massimi
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences
University of Edinburgh
Licence: CC-BY-NC
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
wn.com/6.4. Introphil Scientific Realism And The No Miracles Argument
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course.
Dr Michela Massimi
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences
University of Edinburgh
Licence: CC-BY-NC
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
- published: 23 May 2014
- views: 3
6.5. INTROPHIL - Scientific Anti Realism Constructive Empiricism
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course. Dr Michela Massimi School of Philosophy, Psychology an......
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course. Dr Michela Massimi School of Philosophy, Psychology an...
wn.com/6.5. Introphil Scientific Anti Realism Constructive Empiricism
Week six of the University of Edinburgh's "Introduction to Philosophy" (INTROPHIL) open online course. Dr Michela Massimi School of Philosophy, Psychology an...
Bas van Fraassen: The Semantic Approach to Science, After 50 Years
The 1960s saw many revolutions, worldwide, and some of that epoch's revolutionary spirit manifested itself in philosophy of science, with strong reactions ag......
The 1960s saw many revolutions, worldwide, and some of that epoch's revolutionary spirit manifested itself in philosophy of science, with strong reactions ag...
wn.com/Bas Van Fraassen The Semantic Approach To Science, After 50 Years
The 1960s saw many revolutions, worldwide, and some of that epoch's revolutionary spirit manifested itself in philosophy of science, with strong reactions ag...
Interview with James Robert Brown
March 20, 2014 Dr. James Robert Brown, University of Toronto Dalhousie University Interviewed by Izzy Morin Guest: James Robert Brown is a professor of philo......
March 20, 2014 Dr. James Robert Brown, University of Toronto Dalhousie University Interviewed by Izzy Morin Guest: James Robert Brown is a professor of philo...
wn.com/Interview With James Robert Brown
March 20, 2014 Dr. James Robert Brown, University of Toronto Dalhousie University Interviewed by Izzy Morin Guest: James Robert Brown is a professor of philo...
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Michela Massimi - Perspectival Realism (Nov. 8th 2013)
In her talk, Massimi will review the problems and prospects of scientific perspectivism. Scientific perspectivism has been advocated as a philosophical view ...
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Fundamental Particles & Structures: A Proposal for Realist Pragmatism
Scientific realism is forcefully challenged in connection with attempts to clarify the precise ontology of the putative subject matter of fundamental physics. How far should the realist go in attempting to describe the natures of, for example, the particles of subatomic physics? Saying too little undermines realism by denuding it, but saying too much holds realism hostage to metaphysical disputes
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A New View of Science: Title Search Realism
Global Climate Change: Science, Polity, and Authority Lecture by Naomi Oreskes, Provost, Sixth College, University of California, San Diego. C.P. Snow worrie...
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James Fodor - The Shaky Foundations of Science: An Overview of the Big Issues
Many people think about science in a fairly simplistic way: collect evidence, formulate a theory, test the theory. By this method, it is claimed, science can achieve objective, rational knowledge about the workings of reality. In this presentation I will question the validity of this understanding of science. I will consider some of the key controversies in philosophy of science, including the pro
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Critical Analysis - Structural Realism is NOT Science
Structural Realism? More like Mathematical Surrealism - http://www.integratedpost.com/2014/03/article-analysis-structural-realism-is.html If you wish to leav...
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Roy Bhaskar Interview
At the July 2013 Integral Theory Conference in San Francisco, Giorgio Placenza met with Roy Bhaskar, well known ontological philosopher of Critical Realism a...
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Philosophy of Science Lecture #7: Realism and Conventionalism
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Fine Arthur "Structural Realism, Then and Now"
Résumé Henri Poincaré worried that the ephemeral nature of scientific théories could be seen as amounting to the "bankruptcy of science". Recently his defens...
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Consciousness and The Interface Theory of Perception, Donald Hoffman
Despite substantial efforts by many researchers, we still have no scientific theory of how brain activity can create, or be, conscious experience. This is troubling, since we have a large body of correlations between brain activity and consciousness, correlations normally assumed to entail that brain activity creates conscious experience. Here I explore a solution to the mind-body problem that sta
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Race Realism = Real Racism
The second (and hopefully, last) long-ass response to HeyRuka and the "race realist" nimrods. HeyRuka's video which does not allow ratings and comments pendi...
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Non-Dual Conscious Realism ~ Neil Theise
We propose a generalized theory of “Non-Dual Conscious Realism” addressing the fundamental issue of consciousness. This theoretical framework posits the universing arising from an undifferentiated, non-dual field of pure conscious awareness. From within this universal consciousness emanate the complementary phenomena of Planck scale quantum vacuum and quantum foam, generating space and time, matte
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Sam Harris: Science can ground moral realism
This is a response to Sam Harris in this debate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg7p1BjP2dA
Additional Reading:
The Fact-Value Dichotomy - http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/40104278.pdf
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Spiritual Realism in the Theology and Science Discourse
Convocation 2009 Taylor Lecture The Theology and Science Discourse on Anthropology III. The human Being in His/Her Relation to the Sustaining, Saving, and En...
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Kerbal Space Program (0.23.5) - Realism Overhaul 039 - To Mars! Part 2
I try to get my first interplanetary probe in this series, packed with scientific instruments and goo, out to Mars. The mods installed are those in the Reali...
Michela Massimi - Perspectival Realism (Nov. 8th 2013)
In her talk, Massimi will review the problems and prospects of scientific perspectivism. Scientific perspectivism has been advocated as a philosophical view ......
In her talk, Massimi will review the problems and prospects of scientific perspectivism. Scientific perspectivism has been advocated as a philosophical view ...
wn.com/Michela Massimi Perspectival Realism (Nov. 8Th 2013)
In her talk, Massimi will review the problems and prospects of scientific perspectivism. Scientific perspectivism has been advocated as a philosophical view ...
Fundamental Particles & Structures: A Proposal for Realist Pragmatism
Scientific realism is forcefully challenged in connection with attempts to clarify the precise ontology of the putative subject matter of fundamental physics. H...
Scientific realism is forcefully challenged in connection with attempts to clarify the precise ontology of the putative subject matter of fundamental physics. How far should the realist go in attempting to describe the natures of, for example, the particles of subatomic physics? Saying too little undermines realism by denuding it, but saying too much holds realism hostage to metaphysical disputes that are significantly removed from the context of physics itself. Anjan Chakravartty takes some recent proposals for structural realism in this domain as a case study. On these views, particles are taken to be ontologically dependent, in some way, on structures involving them, which generates certain puzzles concerning the precise ontology of these entities. Assessing each proposal requires that one take a stand on a serious metaphysical challenge, ultimately yielding two options: (1) scepticism regarding the relevant form of structuralism; (2) acceptance of a contentious ontological primitive. He argues that while the choice between these options cannot be forced by physics or metaphysics, agnosticism is nonetheless compatible with scientific realism at a certain level of description, suggesting a more pragmatic attitude towards theorizing at finer-grained levels of analysis.
wn.com/Fundamental Particles Structures A Proposal For Realist Pragmatism
Scientific realism is forcefully challenged in connection with attempts to clarify the precise ontology of the putative subject matter of fundamental physics. How far should the realist go in attempting to describe the natures of, for example, the particles of subatomic physics? Saying too little undermines realism by denuding it, but saying too much holds realism hostage to metaphysical disputes that are significantly removed from the context of physics itself. Anjan Chakravartty takes some recent proposals for structural realism in this domain as a case study. On these views, particles are taken to be ontologically dependent, in some way, on structures involving them, which generates certain puzzles concerning the precise ontology of these entities. Assessing each proposal requires that one take a stand on a serious metaphysical challenge, ultimately yielding two options: (1) scepticism regarding the relevant form of structuralism; (2) acceptance of a contentious ontological primitive. He argues that while the choice between these options cannot be forced by physics or metaphysics, agnosticism is nonetheless compatible with scientific realism at a certain level of description, suggesting a more pragmatic attitude towards theorizing at finer-grained levels of analysis.
- published: 10 May 2015
- views: 17
A New View of Science: Title Search Realism
Global Climate Change: Science, Polity, and Authority Lecture by Naomi Oreskes, Provost, Sixth College, University of California, San Diego. C.P. Snow worrie......
Global Climate Change: Science, Polity, and Authority Lecture by Naomi Oreskes, Provost, Sixth College, University of California, San Diego. C.P. Snow worrie...
wn.com/A New View Of Science Title Search Realism
Global Climate Change: Science, Polity, and Authority Lecture by Naomi Oreskes, Provost, Sixth College, University of California, San Diego. C.P. Snow worrie...
- published: 04 Nov 2009
- views: 1284
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author: UMBCtube
James Fodor - The Shaky Foundations of Science: An Overview of the Big Issues
Many people think about science in a fairly simplistic way: collect evidence, formulate a theory, test the theory. By this method, it is claimed, science can ac...
Many people think about science in a fairly simplistic way: collect evidence, formulate a theory, test the theory. By this method, it is claimed, science can achieve objective, rational knowledge about the workings of reality. In this presentation I will question the validity of this understanding of science. I will consider some of the key controversies in philosophy of science, including the problem of induction, the theory-ladenness of observation, the nature of scientific explanation, theory choice, and scientific realism, giving an overview of some of the main questions and arguments from major thinkers like Popper, Quine, Kuhn, Hempel, and Feyerabend. I will argue that philosophy of science paints a much richer and messier picture of the relationship between science and truth than many people commonly imagine, and that a familiarity with the key issues in the philosophy of science is vital for a proper understanding of the power and limits of scientific thinking.
Slides to the presentation available here: http://www.slideshare.net/adam_ford/the-shaky-foundations-of-science-slides-james-fodor
Video / Slides / Abstract: http://2014.scifuture.org/abstract-the-shaky-foundations-of-science-an-overview-of-the-big-issues-james-fodor/
Conference Program: http://2014.scifuture.org/program/
Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
Science, Technology & the Future: http://scifuture.org
Humanity+: http://humanityplus.org
wn.com/James Fodor The Shaky Foundations Of Science An Overview Of The Big Issues
Many people think about science in a fairly simplistic way: collect evidence, formulate a theory, test the theory. By this method, it is claimed, science can achieve objective, rational knowledge about the workings of reality. In this presentation I will question the validity of this understanding of science. I will consider some of the key controversies in philosophy of science, including the problem of induction, the theory-ladenness of observation, the nature of scientific explanation, theory choice, and scientific realism, giving an overview of some of the main questions and arguments from major thinkers like Popper, Quine, Kuhn, Hempel, and Feyerabend. I will argue that philosophy of science paints a much richer and messier picture of the relationship between science and truth than many people commonly imagine, and that a familiarity with the key issues in the philosophy of science is vital for a proper understanding of the power and limits of scientific thinking.
Slides to the presentation available here: http://www.slideshare.net/adam_ford/the-shaky-foundations-of-science-slides-james-fodor
Video / Slides / Abstract: http://2014.scifuture.org/abstract-the-shaky-foundations-of-science-an-overview-of-the-big-issues-james-fodor/
Conference Program: http://2014.scifuture.org/program/
Subscribe to this Channel: http://youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheRationalFuture
Science, Technology & the Future: http://scifuture.org
Humanity+: http://humanityplus.org
- published: 02 Dec 2014
- views: 122
Critical Analysis - Structural Realism is NOT Science
Structural Realism? More like Mathematical Surrealism - http://www.integratedpost.com/2014/03/article-analysis-structural-realism-is.html If you wish to leav......
Structural Realism? More like Mathematical Surrealism - http://www.integratedpost.com/2014/03/article-analysis-structural-realism-is.html If you wish to leav...
wn.com/Critical Analysis Structural Realism Is Not Science
Structural Realism? More like Mathematical Surrealism - http://www.integratedpost.com/2014/03/article-analysis-structural-realism-is.html If you wish to leav...
Roy Bhaskar Interview
At the July 2013 Integral Theory Conference in San Francisco, Giorgio Placenza met with Roy Bhaskar, well known ontological philosopher of Critical Realism a......
At the July 2013 Integral Theory Conference in San Francisco, Giorgio Placenza met with Roy Bhaskar, well known ontological philosopher of Critical Realism a...
wn.com/Roy Bhaskar Interview
At the July 2013 Integral Theory Conference in San Francisco, Giorgio Placenza met with Roy Bhaskar, well known ontological philosopher of Critical Realism a...
Fine Arthur "Structural Realism, Then and Now"
Résumé Henri Poincaré worried that the ephemeral nature of scientific théories could be seen as amounting to the "bankruptcy of science". Recently his defens......
Résumé Henri Poincaré worried that the ephemeral nature of scientific théories could be seen as amounting to the "bankruptcy of science". Recently his defens...
wn.com/Fine Arthur Structural Realism, Then And Now
Résumé Henri Poincaré worried that the ephemeral nature of scientific théories could be seen as amounting to the "bankruptcy of science". Recently his defens...
Consciousness and The Interface Theory of Perception, Donald Hoffman
Despite substantial efforts by many researchers, we still have no scientific theory of how brain activity can create, or be, conscious experience. This is troub...
Despite substantial efforts by many researchers, we still have no scientific theory of how brain activity can create, or be, conscious experience. This is troubling, since we have a large body of correlations between brain activity and consciousness, correlations normally assumed to entail that brain activity creates conscious experience. Here I explore a solution to the mind-body problem that starts with the converse assumption: these correlations arise because consciousness creates brain activity, and indeed creates all objects and properties of the physical world. To this end, I develop two theses. The interface theory of perception states that perceptual experiences do not match or approximate properties of the objective world, but instead provide a simplified, species-specific, user interface to that world. Conscious realism states that the objective world consists of conscious agents and their experiences; these can be mathematically modeled and empirically explored in the normal scientific manner.
In support of the interface theory of perception, I present Monte Carlo simulations of evolutionary games in which perceptual strategies that see the truth compete with perceptual strategies that do not see the truth but are instead tuned to fitness. The result is that natural selection drives true perceptions to swift extinction. Our perceptions have evolved to guide adaptive behaviors, not to report the truth.
In support of conscious realism, I present a dynamical theory of consciousness in which the observer and the observed have precisely the same mathematical structure, i.e., in which there is a mathematically precise nondualism. I then derive the quantum wave function of the free particle from the asymptotic behavior of the conscious dynamics. This is a step toward solving the mind-body problem from the assumption that consciousness, not physics, is fundamental.
DONALD HOFFMAN, PHD
Donald Hoffman is a cognitive scientist and author of more than 90 scientific papers and three books, including Visual Intelligence: How We Create What We See (W.W. Norton, 2000). He received his BA from UCLA in Quantitative Psychology and his Ph.D. from MIT in Computational Psychology. He joined the faculty of UC Irvine in 1983, where he is now a full professor in the departments of cognitive science, computer science and philosophy. He received the Distinguished Scientific Award of the American Psychological Association for early career research into visual perception, and the Troland Research Award of the US National Academy of Sciences for his research on the relationship of consciousness and the physical world. He was chosen by students at UC Irvine to receive a campus-wide teaching award, and to be included in Who's Who Among America's Teachers.
Hoffman studies visual perception, visual attention and consciousness using mathematical models, computer simulations, and psychological experiments. His empirical research has led to new insights into how we perceive objects, colors and motion. His theoretical research has led to a "user interface" theory of perception—which proposes that natural selection shapes our perceptions not to report truth but simply to guide adaptive behavior. It has also led to a "conscious realism" theory of consciousness—which proposes a formal model of consciousness and the mind-body problem that takes consciousness as fundamental.
wn.com/Consciousness And The Interface Theory Of Perception, Donald Hoffman
Despite substantial efforts by many researchers, we still have no scientific theory of how brain activity can create, or be, conscious experience. This is troubling, since we have a large body of correlations between brain activity and consciousness, correlations normally assumed to entail that brain activity creates conscious experience. Here I explore a solution to the mind-body problem that starts with the converse assumption: these correlations arise because consciousness creates brain activity, and indeed creates all objects and properties of the physical world. To this end, I develop two theses. The interface theory of perception states that perceptual experiences do not match or approximate properties of the objective world, but instead provide a simplified, species-specific, user interface to that world. Conscious realism states that the objective world consists of conscious agents and their experiences; these can be mathematically modeled and empirically explored in the normal scientific manner.
In support of the interface theory of perception, I present Monte Carlo simulations of evolutionary games in which perceptual strategies that see the truth compete with perceptual strategies that do not see the truth but are instead tuned to fitness. The result is that natural selection drives true perceptions to swift extinction. Our perceptions have evolved to guide adaptive behaviors, not to report the truth.
In support of conscious realism, I present a dynamical theory of consciousness in which the observer and the observed have precisely the same mathematical structure, i.e., in which there is a mathematically precise nondualism. I then derive the quantum wave function of the free particle from the asymptotic behavior of the conscious dynamics. This is a step toward solving the mind-body problem from the assumption that consciousness, not physics, is fundamental.
DONALD HOFFMAN, PHD
Donald Hoffman is a cognitive scientist and author of more than 90 scientific papers and three books, including Visual Intelligence: How We Create What We See (W.W. Norton, 2000). He received his BA from UCLA in Quantitative Psychology and his Ph.D. from MIT in Computational Psychology. He joined the faculty of UC Irvine in 1983, where he is now a full professor in the departments of cognitive science, computer science and philosophy. He received the Distinguished Scientific Award of the American Psychological Association for early career research into visual perception, and the Troland Research Award of the US National Academy of Sciences for his research on the relationship of consciousness and the physical world. He was chosen by students at UC Irvine to receive a campus-wide teaching award, and to be included in Who's Who Among America's Teachers.
Hoffman studies visual perception, visual attention and consciousness using mathematical models, computer simulations, and psychological experiments. His empirical research has led to new insights into how we perceive objects, colors and motion. His theoretical research has led to a "user interface" theory of perception—which proposes that natural selection shapes our perceptions not to report truth but simply to guide adaptive behavior. It has also led to a "conscious realism" theory of consciousness—which proposes a formal model of consciousness and the mind-body problem that takes consciousness as fundamental.
- published: 10 Dec 2013
- views: 16545
Race Realism = Real Racism
The second (and hopefully, last) long-ass response to HeyRuka and the "race realist" nimrods. HeyRuka's video which does not allow ratings and comments pendi......
The second (and hopefully, last) long-ass response to HeyRuka and the "race realist" nimrods. HeyRuka's video which does not allow ratings and comments pendi...
wn.com/Race Realism Real Racism
The second (and hopefully, last) long-ass response to HeyRuka and the "race realist" nimrods. HeyRuka's video which does not allow ratings and comments pendi...
- published: 12 Sep 2011
- views: 56786
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author: The Peach
Non-Dual Conscious Realism ~ Neil Theise
We propose a generalized theory of “Non-Dual Conscious Realism” addressing the fundamental issue of consciousness. This theoretical framework posits the univers...
We propose a generalized theory of “Non-Dual Conscious Realism” addressing the fundamental issue of consciousness. This theoretical framework posits the universing arising from an undifferentiated, non-dual field of pure conscious awareness. From within this universal consciousness emanate the complementary phenomena of Planck scale quantum vacuum and quantum foam, generating space and time, matter and energy.
Through successive, recursive, creative interactions, phenomena and entities at each level of scale self-organize into emergent phenomena and entities at each next higher scale, comprising the entire cosmos. These triadic principles of complementarity, recursion, and creative interactivity (wherein “sentience” is the special case of the biological) are reflected throughout all scales. Though emergentist/materialist positions predominate in contemporary discourse regarding consciousness, the primacy of this non-dual conscious reality, which we emphasize is the deepest possible “panpsychist” perspective, is not contradicted by any known scientific phenomena. Also, unlike most emergentist positions, it is inclusive of the inextricable linkage between observer and observed, subject and object, decisively revealed by quantum mechanics. Indeed, at all levels of scale above the quantum realm, quantum-like effects – such as uncertainty, complementarity, superposition, entanglement, non-locality - reflecting such interconnectivity are recognized. Corollaries of Non-Dual Conscious Realism include that: materiality is not implicit in the universe, but is entirely a scale dependent phenomenon; the “hard problem” of qualia is subsumed by confirmation that all phenomena of the universe are qualia within consciousness; neural correlates of
consciousness are not how consciousness is created, but are, rather, the ways in which the nervous systems (human or other) transduce consciousness into adaptive, species-specific perceptions and behaviors. Individual consciousness and associated qualia are part of the universal, non-dual conscious reality.
Neil Theise, MD
Professor of Pathology and of Medicine at Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai
Neil Theise, MD is a practicing pathologist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, where he is Professor of Pathology and of Medicine. He is considered a thought leader in fields of liver diseases, liver stem cells, and adult stem cell plasticity. In recent years, interests in complexity theory applications to biology have led to novel insights regarding stem cell biology, non-Western models of the body, science-spirituality dialogue, and consciousness studies. With Menas Kafatos he is formulating a panpsychist approach to the relationship between consciousness and the universe. He is a Senior Student at the Village Zendo in NYC.
wn.com/Non Dual Conscious Realism ~ Neil Theise
We propose a generalized theory of “Non-Dual Conscious Realism” addressing the fundamental issue of consciousness. This theoretical framework posits the universing arising from an undifferentiated, non-dual field of pure conscious awareness. From within this universal consciousness emanate the complementary phenomena of Planck scale quantum vacuum and quantum foam, generating space and time, matter and energy.
Through successive, recursive, creative interactions, phenomena and entities at each level of scale self-organize into emergent phenomena and entities at each next higher scale, comprising the entire cosmos. These triadic principles of complementarity, recursion, and creative interactivity (wherein “sentience” is the special case of the biological) are reflected throughout all scales. Though emergentist/materialist positions predominate in contemporary discourse regarding consciousness, the primacy of this non-dual conscious reality, which we emphasize is the deepest possible “panpsychist” perspective, is not contradicted by any known scientific phenomena. Also, unlike most emergentist positions, it is inclusive of the inextricable linkage between observer and observed, subject and object, decisively revealed by quantum mechanics. Indeed, at all levels of scale above the quantum realm, quantum-like effects – such as uncertainty, complementarity, superposition, entanglement, non-locality - reflecting such interconnectivity are recognized. Corollaries of Non-Dual Conscious Realism include that: materiality is not implicit in the universe, but is entirely a scale dependent phenomenon; the “hard problem” of qualia is subsumed by confirmation that all phenomena of the universe are qualia within consciousness; neural correlates of
consciousness are not how consciousness is created, but are, rather, the ways in which the nervous systems (human or other) transduce consciousness into adaptive, species-specific perceptions and behaviors. Individual consciousness and associated qualia are part of the universal, non-dual conscious reality.
Neil Theise, MD
Professor of Pathology and of Medicine at Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai
Neil Theise, MD is a practicing pathologist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, where he is Professor of Pathology and of Medicine. He is considered a thought leader in fields of liver diseases, liver stem cells, and adult stem cell plasticity. In recent years, interests in complexity theory applications to biology have led to novel insights regarding stem cell biology, non-Western models of the body, science-spirituality dialogue, and consciousness studies. With Menas Kafatos he is formulating a panpsychist approach to the relationship between consciousness and the universe. He is a Senior Student at the Village Zendo in NYC.
- published: 21 Mar 2015
- views: 1
Sam Harris: Science can ground moral realism
This is a response to Sam Harris in this debate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg7p1BjP2dA
Additional Reading:
The Fact-Value Dichotomy - http://www.jstor....
This is a response to Sam Harris in this debate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg7p1BjP2dA
Additional Reading:
The Fact-Value Dichotomy - http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/40104278.pdf
wn.com/Sam Harris Science Can Ground Moral Realism
This is a response to Sam Harris in this debate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg7p1BjP2dA
Additional Reading:
The Fact-Value Dichotomy - http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/40104278.pdf
- published: 05 Nov 2014
- views: 25
Spiritual Realism in the Theology and Science Discourse
Convocation 2009 Taylor Lecture The Theology and Science Discourse on Anthropology III. The human Being in His/Her Relation to the Sustaining, Saving, and En......
Convocation 2009 Taylor Lecture The Theology and Science Discourse on Anthropology III. The human Being in His/Her Relation to the Sustaining, Saving, and En...
wn.com/Spiritual Realism In The Theology And Science Discourse
Convocation 2009 Taylor Lecture The Theology and Science Discourse on Anthropology III. The human Being in His/Her Relation to the Sustaining, Saving, and En...
Kerbal Space Program (0.23.5) - Realism Overhaul 039 - To Mars! Part 2
I try to get my first interplanetary probe in this series, packed with scientific instruments and goo, out to Mars. The mods installed are those in the Reali......
I try to get my first interplanetary probe in this series, packed with scientific instruments and goo, out to Mars. The mods installed are those in the Reali...
wn.com/Kerbal Space Program (0.23.5) Realism Overhaul 039 To Mars Part 2
I try to get my first interplanetary probe in this series, packed with scientific instruments and goo, out to Mars. The mods installed are those in the Reali...
- published: 26 Jun 2014
- views: 402
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author: Tyler Raiz