Dear all,

Please join us for the CamPoS (Cambridge Philosophy of Science) seminar

Wednesday 30th April 1-2:30pm in HPS Seminar Room 2.

Stuart Firestein (Columbia University) will give a talk entitled "The
scientific method: ignorance, uncertainty, doubt, failure...". The abstract
is below.

Best wishes,

Christopher


Abstract:

Science produces questions more than it generates answers.  Every good
answer leads to new, and ideally better, questions.  This is a process
termed The Principle of Question Propagation by Immanuel Kant, but among
scientists it is a matter of such common knowledge that it is rarely stated
explicitly.  However, like the jargon filled language that passes as easy
conversation for the trained scientist while effectively excluding the
non-expert and nonscientist, this failure to be explicit about the value of
ignorance has the unwanted effect of excluding much of the citizenry from
the inner workings of science. Coincidentally it seems now also to have
fostered a growing and easily manipulated mistrust of both scientists and
science.  Science has become dangerously divorced from the culture, not
because it has grown too difficult or too impenetrable, but because it has
hidden its inner workings of mystery, doubt, uncertainty, failure and
revision, while turning an encyclopedic face to the public. There are
numerous reasons that could be cited for this relatively recent (i.e., last
50 years) development, and historians and sociologists have enumerated a
number of them.  Rather than go over that territory, I would like instead
to explore with you the potentially disastrous consequences of this
distorted perception and ways in which philosophical and historical
perspectives of science can be used to remedy this situation, with a
particular emphasis on science education and policy.
_____________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from the CamPhilEvents mailing list,
or change your membership options, please visit
the list information page: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEvents

List archive: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEventsArchive

Please note that CamPhilEvents doesn't accept email
attachments. See the list information page for further 
details and suggested alternatives.

Reply via email to