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Positivism’s View of Scientific Truth

Positivism’s View of Scientific Truth. Positivism. Movement founded and promoted by August Comte, the 19 th century founder of Sociology Suggested that Human History was passing through 3 inevitable stages Religious Metaphysical Scientific

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Positivism’s View of Scientific Truth

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  1. Positivism’s View of Scientific Truth

  2. Positivism • Movement founded and promoted by August Comte, the 19th century founder of Sociology • Suggested that Human History was passing through 3 inevitable stages • Religious • Metaphysical • Scientific • Founded a scientific “religion” of Positivism, with rituals and holidays and songs, to replace Christianity

  3. Types of Truth Claim • Empirical (Facts): The Sky is blue; the moon is rocky • Evaluative: Murders is wrong; the Mona Lisa is beautiful (includes aesthetic claims) • Metaphysical: God exists; The world has a purpose • Analytic: 2+2=4; Bachelors are unmarried males (includes contradictory claims)

  4. Context of Discovery vs. Context of Justification • Logical Positivists (20th century philosophical and scientific movement) felt the scientific method (combined with mathematical logic) was the one sure way to know whether any claim was true • Weren’t concerned with how scientists came to their theories (context of Discovery), just the neutral, rational and objectivemethod by which they were able to justify their theories (context of justification) • The fact that the discoverer of the benzene molecule was prompted by a dream of a snake eating its tail says nothing about the trustworthiness of science

  5. Sentences • All truth claims (propositions) are sentences, but not all sentences are truth claims • Questions are not propositions • Exclamations are not propositions (Damn you! Doh! Ouch! Yuck!) • Commands are not truth claims (Go to your room! Stop that. Do not enter.)

  6. Some examples of Analytic Truth Claims • All triangles have three sides • The moon can’t be both spherical and not spherical all at once • Adding 1 to any even number gives you an odd number

  7. Some Examples of Metaphysical Truth Claims • God is eternal and unchanging • The universe has a purpose • Suffering has a purpose • Truth is beauty and beauty is truth • Love makes the world go round • All human beings are created equal • The cause of all suffering is due to our failure to extinguish desire

  8. Some Examples of Empirical Truth Claims • All Alberta robins migrate south for the winter • This fossil can’t be both mammalian and Precambrian all at once • Adding one teaspoon of sugar to any drink increases its carbohydrate content.

  9. Some Examples of Evaluative Truth Claims • All intentional acts of killing are wrong • You have a right to vote for whoever you wish • Adding a member of the general public to the panel makes the panel’s decision more fair • We shouldn’t do that, it’s too dangerous • J.S. Back is the greatest composer of the 18th century (an “aesthetic” statement)

  10. What are these Sentences? • Eating meat is not wrong • Is eating meat wrong? • I think that eating meat is wrong • Mike doesn't think that eating meat is wrong • I once thought that eating meat was wrong • She does not realize that eating meat is wrong

  11. The Verification Principle • “Principle that to be meaningful a sentence or proposition must be either verifiable by means of the five senses or a tautology of logic” • Logical Positivists felt that this principle was the heart of the scientific method (an algorithm for making judgments about claims and theories) • Any propositions that can’t measure up to it were essentially meaningless (mere expressions of feeling or imagination)

  12. Scientism • Scientific Method is the only reliable way of gaining knowledge (finding the truth) • Objective • Open-minded • Universal • Cumulative • And Progressive • Religious and artistic thought is believed by positivists and believers in Scientism to be incapable of embodying any of these characteristics

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