HPS 2682 Theories of Confirmation Fall 2010
Phil 2690
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Schedule
Topics and Readings
Class Photos
Results of Ballot
Ballot
Access this site at
http://www.pitt.edu/~jdnorton/teaching/2682_confirmation/general.html
Science is distinguished from other investigations of nature in that the
claims of mature sciences are strongly supported by empirical evidence.
Theories of confirmation provide accounts of this relation of inductive
support. We shall review the range of theories of confirmation, including
formal and less formal approaches. The review will be critical; none of them is
entirely successful. The theories will be tested against significant cases of
the use of evidence in science.
- Instructor
- John D. Norton, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Room
817 CL, 412 624 1051 jdnorton@pitt.edu
- Place
- Room G28 CL
- Time
- Monday 3:00-5:30 pm
Your Part
- Term paper
- To be submitted Friday December 17 in hard copy by noon in 1017CL; or
e-versions in email to me by 5pm.
My policy is NOT to issue incomplete grades, excepting in extraordinary
circumstances. I really do want your papers completed and submitted by
the end of term. We do not want them to linger on like an overdue dental
checkup, filling your lives with unnecessary worry and guilt.
In return for the rigidity of the deadline, the seminar will not meet in
the final week of term (Monday December 13) to give you extra time to
complete the paper.
The paper may be on any subject of relevance to the seminar.
To assist you in commencing work, we ask you submit a paper proposal to
us by Monday November 22. The proposal need only be brief. It should
contain a short paragraph describing the topic to be investigated and
give a brief indication of the sources you intend to use. Do talk to me
about possible topics in advance!
- Small project
- Each of you will find an interesting evidential claim in science
made by scientists and describe it briefly (5 minutes) in our
September 13 meeting. The natural choice is to note that item X is
claimed by scientists to be strong evidence for hypothesis Y in
scientific theory Z. In the course of the seminar, you will track how
well the different approaches to induction explicate the claim and give a
short report in one of the final two seminar meetings.
- Take your turn presenting material
- The seminar will be structured around presentations by seminar members,
including me. They are based on weekly readings drawn from the topics and
reading list; and a short report on the small project.
- In presenting a reading, you should presume
that the seminar has read the reading. You should spend a short amount of
time reviewing the principal claims and arguments of the reading. This is
not intended to replace the seminar's reading of the text, but merely to
provide a basis of common agreement on its content and upon which
subsequent discussion is erected. Your principal burden is to provide a
critical analysis and response to the reading. This analysis can take
many directions. Is the project of the paper clear? Are the theses clear?
Are the arguments cogent? How does the reading relate to other readings
and issues in the seminar? Are there plausible counter-theses? What
arguments support them?
- You should plan to present for at most 30
minutes and that will be followed by discussion of up to 15 minutes for
discussion. If discussion starts prematurely, the discussion time may be
interleaved with the full 45 minutes allocated. Many presenters provide
handouts so that few notes need to be taken. We encourage you stand at
the blackboard, make strong eye contact with the seminar and deliver the
material, writing as needed on the blackboard. This promotes a more
engaging presentation than when you sit at the table with your head
buried in your notes talking to them.
- Attendance and participation
- I look forward to seeing and hearing you each week in the seminar.