Study Questions for HU3700 Final Exam

Fall, 2005

Terms and Names:

absolutism

accidental regularity

ad hoc modification

anarchism

anomaly

antirealism, scientific

auxiliary assumption

Bayes’s Theorem

confirmation

conjecture

crisis

deductive reasoning

degenerating research program

Dembski’s filter

disposition

Duhem-Quine thesis

empiricism

ether

evolution

experimental knowledge

explanation

falsifiable

falsificationism

falsify

Feyerabend, Paul

fossil record

Galileo

genetic drift

geocentric (Ptolemaic) model

Gestalt switch

hard core

heliocentric (Copernican) model

incommensurability of paradigms

inductive reasoning

inductivism

initial condition

intelligent design theory

irreducible complexity

Karl Popper

Lakatos, Imre

law

macroevolution

methodological naturalism

microevolution

mutation

natural selection

naturalistic hypothesis

negative heuristic

neo-Darwinism

New Experimentalism

Newton, Isaac

normal science

objective Bayesianism

paradigm

paradigm shift

positive heuristic

posterior probability

pre-science

prior probability

problem of induction

progressing research program

protective belt

pseudoscience

punctuated equilibrium

realism, scientific

regularity view (of scientific laws)

regularity view, conditional form (of scientific laws)

relativism

research program

scientific revolution

sophisticated falsificationism

speciation

specified complexity

subjective Bayesianism

sublunar region

super-lunar region

theory

theory-dependence of observation

Tower Argument

transitional form

Discussion Questions:

  1. Consider the following statement:

Scientific knowledge is securely established and objective knowledge about the natural world because it is based on facts which are directly given by careful, unprejudiced use of the senses and embodied in laws and theories that are derived from those facts by rigorous logical reasoning.

For each of the following, how would he/she evaluate the statement? What objections, if any, would he/she have to the statement? Be specific.

  1. an inductivist
  2. a falsificationist
  3. Thomas Kuhn
  4. Imre Lakatos
  5. Paul Feyerabend
  6. a “new experimentalist”
  7. a subjective Bayesian
  8. A scientist conducts an experiment to test a particular theory. The outcome of the experiment is not what the theory predicted. What, if anything, may the scientist conclude about the truth or falsity of the theory? Discuss in detail.
  9. What exactly is the problem of induction? What are the main solutions that have been proposed to the problem? What solution to the problem did Karl Popper propose? In your view, does the rationality of scientific reasoning depend on whether the problem of induction can be solved? Explain.
  10. In what ways do falsificationists, like Popper, argue that their philosophy of science is an improvement over inductivism? Specifically, in what respects do they claim that falsificationism is more true to the history of science than inductivism? Be specific. What are the main differences between Popper’s original version of falsificationism and sophisticated falsificationism? Does sophisticated falsificationism represent an improvement over Popper’s original falsificationism, in your view? Why or why not?
  11. Give a full statement and explanation of the Duhem/Quine thesis? In what ways does it present a challenge to falsificationism? Does it conclusively refute falsificationism (Popperian and sophisiticated) in your view? Why or why not?
  12. What was the Copernican Revolution? Why is it called a “revolution”? In what ways did it change scientists’ views about the nature of science and methods of scientific inquiry? Why is it so difficult to fit the Copernican Revolution into the falsificationist model of scientific progress? Be specific.
  13. What does Thomas Kuhn mean by “paradigm”? What are the main differences between paradigms and theories? What are Kuhn’s views about progress in science? What sorts of changes occur during periods of normal science? How do they differ from the kinds of changes that occur when a scientific revolution occurs? Why is the notion of progress across paradigm shifts problematic in Kuhn’s philosophy of science? Be specific.
  14. What were Imre Lakatos’s main criticisms of Kuhn’s views about scientific change? How did he try to correct those shortcomings in his own philosophy of science? Was he successful, in your view? Why or why not? Be specific.
  15. Why did Paul Feyerabend believe that there is no universally valid scientific method? What evidence from the history of science did he cite in support of his contention? Do you find his argument convincing? Why or why not? Be specific.
  16. What essentially is the Bayesian approach to the philosophy of science? What is Bayes’s Theorem? What reasons are there to believe that it is true? What important problems in the philosophy of science was Bayesianism developed in order to solve? What is the main difference between objective and subjective Bayesianism? What are the principal pros and cons of each? Be specific.
  17. What is distinctive about “The New Experimentalism” as a view about the nature of scientific inquiry? What is meant by the term “experimental knowledge”? What is the difference between experimental knowledge and ordinary theoretical knowledge in science? What constitutes scientific progress, according to the new experimentalist school of thought? Be specific.
  18. State and explain three views about the nature of scientific laws. What are the main pros and cons of each one? Does one of them seem more reasonable than the others to you? Explain. Be specific.
  19. What is scientific realism? What is scientific antirealism? What are the principal considerations supporting scientific antirealism? Do you find them persuasive? Why or why not? Be specific.
  20. What are the main points of disagreement between mainstream evolutionary biologists and proponents of intelligent design theory? On what grounds do (most) evolutionary biologists deny that intelligent design theory qualifies as genuine science? How do intelligent design theorists defend themselves against those arguments? Which side do you find more convincing? Why? Be specific.