The teaching of Philosophy of Science is part of the formative activities characterizing cds in Philosophy. The course is an introduction to the central themes and problems of the philosophy of science. Among these students and students will acquire the fundamental features of empirical research methodology through the study of the nature of scientific explanation, the laws of nature, the relationship between hypothesis and observational evidence and the question of scientific realism in the light of the historical change of theories. These general themes will be introduced by making direct reference to the philosophical topics discussed in the texts of some classical authors of the philosophy of science of the twentieth century, thus trying to create the necessary skills to evaluate and formulate in a rigorous philosophical thesis.
The student will be able to apply the acquired knowledge in discussion and argumentation both in a theoretical perspective and in a historical-philosophical perspective. At the end of the course the student will have acquired:
-) ability to analyse and interpret philosophical texts;
-) language and argumentative properties;
-) ability to contextualise the knowledge learned in the field of philosophical debate.
The student will be able to apply the acquired knowledge in discussion and argumentation both in a theoretical perspective and in a historical-philosophical perspective. At the end of the course the student will have acquired:
-) ability to analyse and interpret philosophical texts;
-) language and argumentative properties;
-) ability to contextualise the knowledge learned in the field of philosophical debate.
teacher profile teaching materials
Popper K. Conjectures and Refutations.
Hempel C Philosophy of the Natural Sciences, Prentice Hall, 1966
Carnap R. Philosophical Foundations of Physics 1966
Mutuazione: 20702666 FILOSOFIA DELLA SCIENZA in Scienze della Comunicazione L-20 DORATO MAURO
Programme
The course aims at introducing the key questions of the philosophy and methodology of science, among these the competing theories of scientific explanation, the nature of scientific method, the relation between hypotheses and evidence and the cognitive content of scientific theories in light of their historical change. While the first part of the course will consist in an introduction to these general topics (by using Godfrey-Smith's text), in the second, longer part we will read excerpts of three classics authors of 20th-century philosophy of science, namely Karl Popper, Rudolf Carnap and Carl Hempel. The main problem of the course is the objectivity of scientific knowledge.Core Documentation
Godfrey-Smith P., Theory and Reality Chicago University Press 2021, second EditionPopper K. Conjectures and Refutations.
Hempel C Philosophy of the Natural Sciences, Prentice Hall, 1966
Carnap R. Philosophical Foundations of Physics 1966
Type of delivery of the course
Frontal lecturesType of evaluation
Short answers to four question in 90 minutes