Philosophy 5
Fall 2004
Number | Title | Instructor | Days/time | Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | Science and Human Understanding | Skokowski | TuTh 11-12:30 | 30 Wheeler |
This course provides an introduction to topics in the philosophy of science, with readings from primary sources. We start with an introduction to the philosophy of space and time, through the correspondence of Leibniz and Clarke. Next we examine the influential Logical Positivism movement and its progeny: confirmationism and falsificationism. We then spend some time analyzing Kuhn’s notion of scientific revolutions, and consider a case study in the history of science: the Copernican revolution. We come full circle and revisit the philosophy of space and time from the standpoint of 20th century physics, including empirical and theoretical results, and consider our new world view in the light of Einsteinian relativity.
Previously taught: FL03 (Bacciagaluppi).