2 <strong>Topic II. A Common Shared Reality and Scientific…

Topic II. A Common Shared Reality and Scientific Advancement
  • OVERVIEW

    • Science is grounded in belief in a common, shared reality with some degree of regularity.
    • Science is based in the assumption that we all share a public reality. We will contrast theories of truth as correspondence vs truth as coherence, as well as underdetermination and social factors in science. Despite many limitations, science is effective primarily because it is self-correcting; that is, it involves a constant critique of the reliability and validity of our measures and the reality of the entities they seek to measure. Science assumes (or has come to believe in) an objective reality that we all share, which is at least in part knowable.   
    • Addressing the Question: Why is Science Effective?
      • The Reality Assumption
      • Science as Self-Correcting
  • TOPIC RESOURCES

  • EXAMPLES

    • Introductory Examples
      • When scientists first developed thermometers, several different substances were used. The problem was, these substances had different rates of expansion, yielding different ways to quantify "temperature." For example, water, alcohol, and mercury expand at different rates: if you set up thermometers with "0 degrees" equalized, each of the substances will hit "100 degrees" at a different temperature. How, then, do we know which kind of thermometer to use? Is the temperature "really" 100 degrees when a mercury thermometer says so, or when a water thermometer says so?
    • Exemplary Quotes
      • “Science means, first of all, a certain dispassionate method. To suppose that it means a certain set of results that one should pin one’s faith upon and hug forever is sadly to mistake its genius, and degrades the scientific body to the status of a sect.” – William James, “What Psychical Research Has Accomplished,” in Will to Believe
      • “They seem to think that anybody’s opinion is as good as anybody else’s on this matter where there is only one reality out there. It may be hard to figure out, but it’s still there anyway.”
      • “Either the earth is going to warm by >4 degrees over the next 50 years because of human-added greenhouse gasses or not—whether or not the proponents on each side of the debate are biased! ‘Nature always bats last.’”
    • Cautionary Quotes: Mistakes, Misconceptions, & Misunderstandings
      • Commonest mistakes are: (a.) taking the logs of the science-raft for "ideals" rather than claims and (b.) not grasping just how science is self-correcting.
      • “Well, I just happen to think that if you punish people whenever they misread a word they will learn to read much faster—and most people agree with me. So...”
      • "Science is just another religion, no better and no worse than any other. They use textbooks as their scripture, and scientists are their priests. You should choose whichever authority feels most right to you or stick with the authority you were raised with, because there's no other way to choose between them."
  • LEARNING GOALS

  • CLASS ELEMENTS

    • Suggested Readings & Reading Questions
    • Clicker Questions
      • ‘Autism’ should be defined:
        • a. Operationally, in terms of observable symptoms. There could be different, equally good definitions.
        • b. Conventionally, by arbitrarily fastening onto one set of symptoms.  
        • c. There’s a real phenomenon out there,‘autism’, but room for continuous progress indefining it. 
      • Suppose there is such a condition as autism 'out there.' Who should be deciding whether it's a disorder or merely part of unproblematic neurodiversity?
        • a. Psychiatrists
        • b. People diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder
        • c. Everyone
        • d. Some other group
    • Discussion Questions
      • If every belief  were truly just as good as any other, what implications would that have for...
        • A. How we should reason about what to believe?  
        • B.  How we should reason about what to do?  
        • C. Human communication?  
        • D. What could be meant when someone calls a claim “true”?  
      • If there were not a shared reality, what would that mean for...
        • science?  
        • group decision-making?
        • communication?
      • Can you think of other epistemic frameworks that, like science, are self-correcting? If so, how are they similar? How different?  
      • What differentiates science from a religion? Describe two elements of science that are not true of religion.
      • Suppose there is scientific consensus on an issue, but you have an intuition that runs against that scientific consensus.  Imagine you are obliged to advocate one side or the other (at least provisionally).  
    • Class Exercises
    • Homework
      • Why wouldn't it be possible to throw out all our beliefs and start completely from scratch?
      • We have mental representations of all kinds of entities that we have never observed with our naked senses, like microbes, the rings around Jupiter, and black holes. How are our representations of these things different from our representations of directly observed entities like kittens and mangoes?