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Science and society

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Science and society ... theories about science) impact commonsense views, public policy, etc. Science at the Bar: determining what is science and what is not. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Science and society


1
Science and society
  • How do scientific theories (or philosophical
    theories about science) impact commonsense views,
    public policy, etc.
  • Science at the Bar determining what is science
    and what is not.
  • Studies of non-human primates how do they
    challenge longstanding views that humans are
    unique in the animal kingdom? And, if we are not
    so different from other primates, what are
    ethical responsibilities to them?

2
Science at the bar
  • Larry Laudan v. Michael Ruse
  • Laudan
  • McLean vs. Arkansas was a hollow victory
  • Ruses ruse

3
Science at the bar
  • Judge Overton
  • Creation Science is not science because it does
    not contain the essential features of science
  • It does not appeal to natural law
  • Its claims are not testable or falsifiable
  • Its proponents and claims are dogmatic rather
    than tentavie
  • Laudans alternative CS is testable and many of
    its claims are patently false.

4
Science at the bar
  • A far more serious problem is that the way
    science was portrayed in the case is a false
    stereotype
  • Many scientific claims also cannot be tested in
    isolation and the logic of falsification is
    severely limited by that
  • Many scientific claims are not viewed by
    scientists of the day as open to negotiation
    there is a degree of dogmatism about core
    commitments among scientists.
  • We dont insist that in order for something to
    have happened or to exist we must know what laws
    explain it (for example, we know evolution
    occurred and continues to but there are no laws
    in evolutionary theory).

5
Science at the bar
  • In what respects was the portrait of science a
    false stereotype?
  • Not all sciences have laws in the sense presumed
    here
  • It is not clear that there really is any
    definition or set of criteria that succeed in
    defining science and demarcating it from other
    endeavors
  • In short, the pro-science defenders are
    defending a philosophy of science which is every
    bit as outmoded as the science of creationism

6
Pro Judice
  • Ruse
  • To say that science appeals to law is not
    asserting that we know all the laws.
  • Science does not break with law it does not
    appeal to miracles.
  • The Constitution does not prohibit the teaching
    of weak or bad science. It prohibits the teaching
    of religion.

7
A third approach?
  • Rather than an argument by analogy, the argument
    should be understood as invoking the following
    kind of reasoning
  • Where O is the object or phenomenon to be
    explained and H is a proposed hypothesis to
    explain O, we can ask
  • What is the likelihood of O if H? (Not what is
    the probability of H given O?)
  • O Noise in the attic
  • H Gremlins are up there bowling

8
A third approach?
  • O Noise in the attic
  • H Gremlins are up there bowling
  • Although the probability of H is very low, if
    anything at all,
  • P(H/x)
  • The likelihood of O if H is high
  • P (x/H)

9
A third approach?
  • O The intricate and functional designs of
    organisms and their parts
  • H1 They are the product of a designer
  • H2 They are the product of random, natural
    processes
  • P(O/H1) gt P(O/H2)
  • But we are reminded again that there are no
    crucial tests in science
  • H3 They are the product of natural selection
  • Is P(O/H1) P(O/H3)?
  • If so, we can ask what is P(H1/O)? And what is
    P(H2/O)?
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