1 / 34

Overview of schools in the philosophy of science

Overview of schools in the philosophy of science. Introductory Meeting Philosophy of Science Albert Meijer (September 10, 2012). Football and philosophy.

manchu
Download Presentation

Overview of schools in the philosophy of science

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Overview of schools in the philosophy of science Introductory Meeting Philosophy of Science Albert Meijer (September 10, 2012)

  2. Football and philosophy • ‘Rosales lets the ball run because he feels that, if he would play the ball, he would be offside.’ FC Twente – Werder Bremen (20 October 2010)

  3. Metaphors for knowledge production • Video: research must lead to a precise of representation of reality • Story: research must lead to a (re)construction of the meanings of social actors • Computer simulation: research must lead to a reduction of reality into basic mechanisms. • Cartoon: research must lead to pictures that are inspired by interactions with and observations of social actors.

  4. Video

  5. Empirism • Reality: out there • Knowledge criterion: correspondence • Value: truth • Key activity: observation • Domain: universal

  6. Great thinkersAristotle, Bacon and Popper

  7. Rembrandt

  8. Rene Torenvlied

  9. Story

  10. Constructivism • Reality: in us • Knowledge criterion: meaning(s) • Value: insight • Key activity: interaction • Domain: contextual

  11. Great thinkersSocrates, De Montaigne, Berger/Luckmann

  12. Vincent van Gogh

  13. Huub Dijstelbloem

  14. Computer simulation

  15. Rationalism • Reality: behind perceptions • Knowledge criteriom: ideal • Value: control • Key activity: thinking • Domain: universal

  16. Great thinkersPlato, Descartes and Coleman

  17. Mondriaan

  18. Willem Schinkel

  19. Cartoon

  20. Postmodernism • Reality: what reality? • Knowledge criterion: esthetics • Value: amazement • Key activity: mirroring • Domain: contextual

  21. Great thinkersNietzsche and Baudrillard

  22. Dian-Marie Hosking

  23. General theme: value of science What is your position? • Science serves no other goal than science. • Science needs to produce valuable knowledge for society. • Science needs to criticize abuses of power.

  24. Frank Miedema

  25. Positioning the books • Kuhn: • Understanding science as a social practice • Struggle between the metaphors • Kitcher: • Understanding science – society interface • Value of these metaphors • Flyvbjerg • Understanding social science • Contextuality crucial to metaphors

  26. Value of these metaphors(1) • Use within one research project • E.g: e-mail in bureaucratic organizations • Video: systematic empirical research (text analysis, interviews, message analysis) • Stories: continuing interactions with all kinds of users of e-mail • Computer simulation: ideal type of bureaucratic organization in an information age • Cartoon: use of ambiguous terms such as ‘informal formalization’

  27. Value of these metaphors (2) • Emphasis on one form of knowledge production • Video: International comparative research into Internet and political behavior • Stories: Empirical analysis of meanings of disclosure of oversight information • Computer simulation: Analysis of different perspectives on the relation transparency-trust • Cartoon: Provocative research into hypes concerning Internet and government

  28. Video: Internet and political behavior • International comparative research • Large-scale survey • Measuring perceptions and (reported) behavior • Aim: general relation between cultural traits and impact of Internet

  29. Stories: Meanings of disclosure of oversight information • Research in two countries • In-depth interviews • Reconstructing (patterns in) meanings • Aim: understanding variety in local meanings

  30. Computer simulation: perspectives on the relation transparency-trust • Analysis of the literature and meta-theoretical perspectives • Desk research • Identifying ideal-types • Aim: analyzing the core differences in perspectives

  31. Cartoon: Internet hypes • Meta-analysis of research and practices • Desk research and contacts with practitioners • Criticizing current practices • Aim: make scientists and practitioners think about their practices

  32. Value of these metaphors (3) • You will develop a consistent argument concerning approaches to research. • Do you strive for a video, story, computer simulation, cartoon or something else? • What does this mean for the way you will do research?

  33. Previous research questions • How can we understand ‘learning’ ontologically and epistemologically? • How can I defend the production of contextual knowledge? • What role does power play in the social reality that I investigate and what does that mean for my role as a researcher? • How can we understand the relation between science and personal ideals? • To what extent is accepted argumentation the key to social scientific knowledge? • How to increase the use of scientific knowledge in practice? • Why or why not should a researcher make his or her reserach socially relevan? • Is the integration of contextual and universal knowledge possible? • What is the role of expectation in research with various stakeholders? • What is the value of a case study in social science? • Why should a social scientist use hypotheses when she is aware of all the limitations? • What kind of knowledge can be produced with a survey?

More Related