Week 1: Success and failure in science Flashcards
Hvad er demarkationsproblemet?
Demarkationsproblem, i filosofien en betegnelse for problemet om, hvorledes man sondrer mellem egentlig videnskab og opfattelser, der ikke er videnskabelige, men påberåber sig denne status (pseudovidenskaber, religiøse, metafyiske).
Hvilke svar giver hhv. positivisterne og Popper på demarkationsproblemet?
Positivists: empirical method & measurable statements (also popper)
Verification criteria - all statements which are not based on observations and experiences are meaningless
Role of philosophy is to produce inductive logic which explains relation between world and scientific statements
Popper: science is about conjecture and failures
Statements or systems of statements (in order to be ranked as scientific) must be capable of conflicting with possible/conceivable observations
A sentence (or theory) is empirical-scientific if and only if it is falsifiable
Poppers “falsificerbarhed”
Falsificerbarhed betyder at en teori/hypotese kan efterprøves ved hjælp af eksperimenter
Poppers falsifikation
Falsifikation betyder at man vil påvise at ens hypotese/ teori er forkert gennem eksperimenter, på alle tænklige måder
Hvilke kritikpunkter har været fremsat mod Poppers teori?
Quine-duhem thesis
Risky generalisations do not always mean good science
Falsifiability criteria too restrictive
Hypotheses about evolution/function of genes/proteins cannot be absolut generalisations
Reproductability not always necessary
Hvilke elementer af positivisterne og poppers teorier har overlevet i moderne videnskab?
Critical, unbiased
No ad hoc
Hvordan håndteres uventede resultater typisk? Er der eksempler på eksperimenter som har falsificeret hypotesen (a la Popper)? Eller hvor man kritisk har efterset andre elementer i eksperimentet (f.eks. hjælpehypoteser)?
If the unexpected results are few and differ a lot from a larger set of results, the unexpected result might be removed from the results all together
The hypothesis could be changed to fit the results
When flat earthers did an experiment to prove that the earth is flat. The results actually ended up proving that earth was indeed not flat. Therefore their experiment falsified their hypothesis.
When scientists based their hypothesis on the knowledge of the way proteins are folded. They later discovered that not all proteins are folded and that their results therefore wouldn’t back the hypothesis.
Hvordan vil I beskrive jeres eksempel ud fra Güttinger og Loves ”taxonomy of failure”? Kan I give eksempler på alle fejltyper, teksten nævner?
We expect that our results were because of a failure of precedent. It was most likely our materials or technique that were not proper and led to the unexpected results.
If you look at the experiment involving the folding of proteins, the failure to observe expected outcomes was because of failure of theorizing. They based their hypothesis on prior knowledge that turned out to not be true.
Fraud - pressure to publish. Removing or adding results. Changing results. P-hacking
Hvilke tiltag kan man gøre for at mindske de forskellige typer fejl?
Lessen the pressure to publish
Publish their hypothesis and P-values before doing the experiment.
Very detailed description of experiment and protocol
Better funding and more background research
Diskussion: Er reproducerbarhed lige vigtigt som videnskabeligt ideal i alle typer forsøg og felter? Skal/bør det være det? Inddrag gerne teksten af Leonelli i diskussionen.
Based on the text from Leonelli, the answer is no.
The need to be able to reproduce the same results, can lead to important results being pushed aside if they cannot be reproduced.
There are some situations where it’s impossible to recreate the exact same conditions and therefore impossible to receive the same results. This can once again lead to important findings being ignored or devalued, as they don’t live up to the condition of being “reproducerbar”.
important to weigh strengths and limitations - ecological validity vs reproducibility
Karl Popper (1902-1994)
His philosophy was inspired by the success of physicists and by his skepticism of phycologists.
Logical Empiricism
Developed by an influential group of philosophers and scientists who where a part of the Vienna Circle.
The logical empiricists were pro-science. and surprisingly anti philosophy.
They strongly rejected most of the German philosophy that was popular at the time.
- Philosophers that used terms and concepts that were not rooted in observation and experience were talking nonsense
- The proper role of the philosopher was to analyse the logical structure of scientific statements in their relation to each other and to the world
The logical empiricists picture of scientific progress
Observation reports –> hypothesis –> Prediction/explanation –> confirmation –> and back to hypothesis.
The hypothesis is formulated as a scientific law or generalization
The explanation can be derived from the hypothesis.
Hypothesis and confirmation relies on induction
Hypothesis to explanation relies on deduction.
Induction
Inductive is used to describe reasoning that involves using specific observations, such as observed patterns, to make a general conclusion. This method is sometimes called induction. Induction starts with a set of premises, based mainly on experience or experimental evidence. It uses those premises to generalize a conclusion.
Can be flawed, since An inductive argument may be highly probable, but even if all the observations are accurate, it can lead to incorrect conclusions.
Deduction
Deductive reasoning (also called deduction) involves starting from a set of general premises and then drawing a specific conclusion that contains no more information than the premises themselves. Deductive reasoning is sometimes called deduction (note that deduction has other meanings in the contexts of mathematics and accounting).
Here’s an example of deductive reasoning: chickens are birds; all birds lay eggs; therefore, chickens lay eggs. Another way to think of it: if something is true of a general class (birds), then it is true of the members of the class (chickens).
Deduction can go wrong if you start with wrong premises.