Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches
This new anthology includes both classic and contemporary readings on the methods and scope of science. Jeffrey Foss depicts science in a broadly humanistic context, contending that it is philosophically interesting because it has reshaped nearly all aspects of human culture—and in so doing has reshaped humanity as well. While providing a strong introduction to epistemological and metaphysical issues in science, this text goes beyond the traditional topics, enlarging the scope of philosophical engagement with science. Substantial introductions and critical questions are provided for each reading.

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Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches
This new anthology includes both classic and contemporary readings on the methods and scope of science. Jeffrey Foss depicts science in a broadly humanistic context, contending that it is philosophically interesting because it has reshaped nearly all aspects of human culture—and in so doing has reshaped humanity as well. While providing a strong introduction to epistemological and metaphysical issues in science, this text goes beyond the traditional topics, enlarging the scope of philosophical engagement with science. Substantial introductions and critical questions are provided for each reading.

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Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches

Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches

Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches

Science and the World: Philosophical Approaches

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Overview

This new anthology includes both classic and contemporary readings on the methods and scope of science. Jeffrey Foss depicts science in a broadly humanistic context, contending that it is philosophically interesting because it has reshaped nearly all aspects of human culture—and in so doing has reshaped humanity as well. While providing a strong introduction to epistemological and metaphysical issues in science, this text goes beyond the traditional topics, enlarging the scope of philosophical engagement with science. Substantial introductions and critical questions are provided for each reading.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781551116242
Publisher: Broadview Press
Publication date: 04/04/2014
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 566
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Jeffrey Foss is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Victoria.

Table of Contents

Introduction for Students
Introduction for Instructors

SECTION ONE
Science and Method: From Proof to Models

Introduction

  1. Isaac Newton, Newton on Scientific Method
  2. David Hume, “Skeptical Doubts Concerning the Operations of the Understanding”
  3. Carl G. Hempel, “Scientific Inquiry: Invention and Test”
  4. Israel Scheffler, “Explanation”
  5. Karl Popper, “The Problem of Induction”
  6. Thomas Kuhn, from The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
  7. Sandra Harding, “Why ‘Physics’ Is a Bad Model for Physics”
  8. Ronald Giere, “The Feminism Question in the Philosophy of Science”
  9. Susan Haack, “Nail Soup: A Brief, Opinionated History of the Old Deferentialism”
  10. Jeffrey Foss, “Science, Maps, and Models”
  11. Bas van Fraassen, “Arguments Concerning Scientific Realism”
  12. Paul Churchland, “Theoretical Science, Creativity, and Reaching behind the Appearances”
  13. Kent A. Peacock, “Realism in a Quantum World”

SECTION TWO
Science, Religion, and Ethics: Our Relationships to the World

Introduction

  1. Galileo Galilei, Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina
  2. Extracts from The Book of Genesis
  3. Patricia Smith Churchland, “Religion and the Brain”
  4. Henry M. Morris, Extracts from Scientific Creationism
  5. Michael Ruse, “Creationism Considered”
  6. Daniel C. Dennett, Extracts from Darwin’s Dangerous Idea
  7. Edward O. Wilson, “Heredity” and Michael Ruse and Edward O. Wilson, “The Evolution of Ethics”
  8. Steven Pinker, “Psychological Correctness”
  9. Richard Dawkins, “What’s Wrong with Cloning?”
  10. David Tracy, “Human Cloning and the Public Realm: A Defense of Intuitions of the Good”
  11. Philip Kitcher, “Whose Self Is It, Anyway?”
  12. Karen Green and John Bigelow, “Does Science Persecute Women? The Case of the 16th-17th Century Witch-Hunts”

DICTIONARY

Acknowledgements

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