Facts and value Flashcards
What determines a fact to be factual?
Authority. • Authority claimed in factual matters based on the validity and reliability of the results of the study
what is reiliability and validity?
• Reliability: the extent to which the same results can be obtained using the same methods over time (test-re-test repeatability), across items (internal consistency), and by other researchers (inter-rater reliability).
• Validity: the degree to which a study actually measures what it purports to measure. There are several different forms of validity in both quantitative and qualitative research.
what can lead to an abuse of authority
• Value judgments may lead to an abuse of authority (pg. 13.)
• using your authority to make valued Judgements that you are not suited to judge and spreading it
what is• truth proposition? What does it entail
A fact • meets the truth to an extent (truth criterion).However it is a falli able truth
as it has not been disproven . People can understand and follow the statement as it logically makes sense no matter how much it is repeated
What is value?
• judgements of approval or disapproval (not dependent on the truth-criterion)
• based on belief
• proposition is that no value can be derived (that is it cannot follow logically) from a statement of fact
what is the ought - gap?
• one cannot justify on a set of facts for a moral problem
• google def:It is common to think that there is a gap between is and ought — that is, thatpremises which are entirely descriptive or factual cannot legitimately yield a conclusion which is normative or ethical.
what did Hume argue?
• Reason can combat emotions and vise versa
• No amour of Knowledge can affect your emotional or moral problems with others
• only your bond with them does
our conceptions from right from wrong does not derive from logical reasoning
but values
• value sentiments and Justifactions will always have an element of arbitrary ness
what is Hammersly contribution to facts and values? How does he connect to weber?
• Summarizing British and North American debates of the relationship between social scientific knowledge and its relationship to values.
• Social Scientist and Moral Philosophers alike try to answer Hume’s skepticism
• Hammersley’s answer is based on Weber
what is positivism and enlightment Ideal? What we some examples of this?
• Social Science should follow the Natural Sciences in form, method, and conclusions such that social facts become as clear as scientific facts. In other words, SS should use imperative facts like Science
examples:
• Homicide explained as easily as the fact that there are two hydrogen atoms in a water molecule,
• Market behavior is as predictable as the earth’s trajectory around the sun
What is the problem with Positivism and Enlightenment Ideal
• people reject scientific model because its methods have failed to produce practical knowledge
• no pratical results were yielded which caused this rejection
• Doubts that the social world is compatible with the methods of investigation of the natural sciences
• Increasing disenchantment with the role natural science plays in our modern society.
• • If facts are distinct from facts, how can a social scientist speak to issues such as inequality, social change, discrimination, human rights, or discrimination? How can a social science be both “value neutral” speak to such practical and ethical problems?
What is this table arguing? https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Im6d4r_UXell5KIarDhE3UlHzIV-11jq/view?usp=drivesdk
This table is arguing for and against the Positivism and Enlightenment Ideal
How are facts Justisfied? How are values not justified
• Facts are justified on the basis of reason (evidence, reliability of method and so on)
• Values cannot be justified by reason (Hume’s argument)
who believes ultimate ends cannot be rationally determined?
Berlin, Weber and Hammersley
what is Berlin’s arguments regarding ultimate ends
Our ability to identify some proposition as an ultimate end is just a “brute fact” of human existence
• Fundamental values are capable of being mediated and guided by rational evaluation and discussion
• The sense of reality (Berlin): one takes the evidence as it is in one’s evaluation of ultimate ends, even if the evidence runs contrary to one’s ultimate ends. (see pg. 15:
• “Weber saw social science as an essential component of the modern world, and as playing a key role in injecting a sense of realism into practical decisions of all kinds.”)
what is sense of reality?
• The sense of reality (Berlin): one takes the evidence as it is in one’s evaluation of ultimate ends, even if the evidence runs contrary to one’s ultimate ends. (see pg. 15: