TASK 5 - ART/SCIENCE + HISTORY OF SCIENCE Flashcards

1
Q

art

A
  • artists play with perception, represent mental processes, point our emotions and cognitions out to us in a playful way
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2
Q

art + science

A
  • separation prevents real world from being an object of fantasy –> favour lack of culture
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3
Q

ancient history of science

A
  1. Plato: knowledge acquisition was associated with deductive reasoning; observation not needed
  2. Aristotle: made distinction between inductive + deductive –> practiced deduction
  3. Bacon: inductive reasoning based on observation + experimentation became core of scientific thinking for empiricists
    - -> observation over conviction
    - elements were actively manipulated to find the most likely interpretation of phenomenon
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4
Q

logical positivism

A

= identified verification as the core principle of the scientific method
- verificationism = a statement is scientific only if it can be verified as true/false through value free observation
- observation (value-free) –> induction –> verification (based on correspondence theory of truth)
x knowledge can’t be produced from facts alone
x prove inductive conclusion, is logically impossible

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5
Q

Popper

- book

A
  • falsificationism = statements that cannot be falsified make no clear predictions thus aren’t scientific
  • degrees of falsifiability = the more falsifiable (dependent on level of detail + scope) a theory the better the theory is
  • every “good” scientific theory is a prohibition = it forbids certain things to happen, the more the better
  • science can be falsified + there is a willingness to do so
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6
Q

Popper viewpoint

A
  • falsifiable, testable, no confirmation

- you need to replace a falsified theory immediately as soon as it has been contradicted

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7
Q

Popper

- hypothetico-deductive method

A

= science better considered as the formulation of theories (on the basis of inductive reasoning + educated guessing) that scientists subsequently try to falsify by deriving hypotheses which are put to the falsification test
–> scientific progress involves inductive + deductive reasoning

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8
Q

Kuhn

- book

A
  • theory of scientific progress = all observations and theoretical concepts were dependent on the language of the adopted theory/conjecture
  • pre-science –> normal science –> crisis –> revolution –> new normal science –> new crisis…
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9
Q

Kuhn

- viewpoint

A
  • paradigm shift
  • inductive reasoning
  • never ending cycle
  • a discipline needs a general theory to become scientific –> forms a paradigm against which observations are made
  • all knowledge is relative and time-dependent
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10
Q

Lakatos

- viewpoint

A
  • heuristics (positive + negative)
  • protective belt (only drop theory when core is hit, not when only belt/periphery)
  • falsification is too strict
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