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Philosophy of Science

By: Jeffrey L. Kasser, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Jeffrey L. Kasser
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Publisher's Summary

What makes science science? Why is science so successful? How do we distinguish science from pseudoscience? This exciting inquiry into the vigorous debate over the nature of science covers important philosophers such as Karl Popper, W. V. Quine, Thomas Kuhn, Paul Feyerabend, Imre Lakatos, Carl Hempel, Nelson Goodman, and Bas van Fraassen.

These thinkers responded in one way or another to logical positivism, the dominant movement influencing the philosophy of science during the first half of the 20th century - a movement whose eventual demise is an object lesson in how truly difficult it is to secure the logical foundations of a subject that seems so unassailably logical: science.

The philosophy of science can be abstract and theoretical, but it is also surprisingly practical. Science plays a pivotal role in our society, and a rigorous study of its philosophical foundations sheds light on the ideas, methods, institutions, and habits of mind that have so astonishingly and successfully transformed our world.

In the course of these 36 stimulating lectures, you will investigate a wide range of philosophical approaches to science, including empiricism, constructivism, scientific realism, and Bayesianism. You'll also examine such concepts as natural kinds, bridge laws, Hume's fork, the covering-law model, the hypothetico-deductive model, and inference to the best explanation (mistakenly called "deduction" in the Sherlock Holmes stories).

Professor Kasser shows how these and other tools allow us to take apart scientific arguments and examine their inner workings - all the while remaining an impartial guide as you navigate the arguments among different philosophers during the past 100 years.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.

©2006 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2006 The Great Courses

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Best Great Courses I've listened to

Is this course easy? No.
Is this course going to make you an expert? No
Is this course going to solve all your problems or answer all your questions? No
Is it an interesting and we'll delivered discourse on a complicated but, I think, important subject that will give you a framework and some tools to use in thinking for yourself? YES!
I have a degree in philosophy (but in other areas than this course) and a laypersons interest in the subject of what claims Western science makes to epistemic specialness and how justified those claims are. This course has given me a historical tour of that subject so I can better understand current arguments. It has also provided me with some tools I can use to evaluate current arguments and to think for myself. What more could you reasonably want? (And you do not need a background in philosophy to understand it - just a willingness to do some thinking).
The course is delivered in a clear and entertaining manner that can disguise the denseness of the information conveyed and I will definitely listen through again at least once more as a first listen was not enough to "get" some aspects. But I'm looking forward to that. What value for money if I evaluate value in terms of information and entertainment! That's even more than I reasonably expected!

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More darn philosophy

This is a book for philosophers by philosophers about why they don't understand science. If you're a scientist, an Engineer or a Doctor, don't buy this book, it'll drive you crazy, as these philosophers grip on reality is fleeting. Buy "Your Deceptive Mind. A scientific guide to critical thinking skills" instead.
Seriously something is wrong with philosophers.

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