Dear all,

Please join us for the first CamPoS (Cambridge Philosophy of Science) 
seminar of Easter Term this Wednesday, 1st May, 1-2:30pm in HPS Seminar 
Room 2. William Harper (University of Western Ontario) will give a talk 
entitled "Isaac Newton's scientific method". The abstract is below, 
followed by the line-up for the whole term.

All welcome.

Best wishes,
Vashka

--

On the basic Hypothetico-deductive model hypothesized principles are tested 
by experimental verification of observable consequences drawn from them. 
Empirical success is limited to accurate prediction. Newton's inferences 
from phenomena realize an ideal of empirical success that is richer than 
prediction. To realize Newton's richer conception of empirical success a 
theory needs to do more than to accurately predict the phenomena it 
purports to explain; in addition, it needs to have the phenomena accurately 
measure parameters of the theory. Newton's method aims to turn theoretical 
questions into ones which can be empirically answered by measurement from 
phenomena. Propositions inferred from phenomena are provisionally accepted 
as guides to further research. Newton employs theory-mediated measurements 
to turn data into far more informative evidence than can be achieved by 
hypothetico-deductive confirmation alone. On his method deviations from the 
model developed so far count as new theory-mediated phenomena to be 
exploited as carrying information to aid in developing a more accurate 
successor. All of these enrichments are exemplified in the classical 
response to Mercury's perihelion problem. Contrary to Kuhn, Newton's method 
endorses the radical transition from his theory to Einstein's. These richer 
themes of Newton's method are, also, strikingly realized in the response to 
a challenge to general relativity from a later problem posed by Mercury's 
perihelion. We can also see Newton's method at work in cosmology today in 
the support afforded to the (dark energy) cosmic expansion from the 
agreeing measurements from supernovae and cosmic microwave background 
radiation.

--

1 May: William Harper (University of Western Ontario) "Isaac Newton's 
scientific method"

8 May: Paulina Sliwa (Philosophy, Cambridge) "Knowing and understanding"

15 May: Donald Gillies (UCL) "Two views on the relation between causality 
and probability"

22 May: Ian Kidd (Durham University) "Epistemic humility"

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