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F34PPP #6: Maybe, Minister…

F34PPP #6: Maybe, Minister…. Philip Moriarty School of Physics & Astronomy philip.moriarty@nottingham.ac.uk www.nottingham.ac.uk/physics/research/nano. Today. Popular perception of science Kuhn and scientific revolutions Can politics and science speak the same language?

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F34PPP #6: Maybe, Minister…

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  1. F34PPP #6: Maybe, Minister… Philip Moriarty School of Physics & Astronomy philip.moriarty@nottingham.ac.uk www.nottingham.ac.uk/physics/research/nano

  2. Today • Popular perception of science • Kuhn and scientific revolutions • Can politics and science speak the same language? • Evidence-driven policy?

  3. F34PPP in brief -- assessment • A short blog post (300 - 500 words) [Deadline: Oct. 20] 10% • An opinion piece (along the lines of a one-page Physics World article, 1000-1500 words) [Deadline: Nov. 17] 30% • A "feature article" (2000-2500 words, in the style of a broadsheet article) [Deadline: Jan 12] 60%

  4. Public Perception of Science http://blogs.nicholas.duke.edu/inphdeep/creativity-and-science/

  5. http://electroncafe.wordpress.com/2011/05/04/scientific-process-rage/http://electroncafe.wordpress.com/2011/05/04/scientific-process-rage/

  6. Vive la revolution?

  7. Vive la revolution? • “…unquestionably the most influential work of the philosophy of science in the last 50 years” [Okasha]

  8. Science is…? • cumulative • context of discovery and context of justification entirely distinct • evaluations are value-free • sharp distinction between theory and experiment • scientific terms have fixed and precise meanings

  9. Science is…? …in a word, objective

  10. Kuhn • A physicist by training, not a philosopher. PhD at Harvard. • Taught a “science for the humanities” course. • Came to realise that “context of discovery” and “context of justification” aren’t distinct. • Scientists work within a particular intellectual framework www.theguardian.com/science/2012/aug/19/thomas-kuhn-structure-scientific-revolutions

  11. Scientists are people too… www.wired.com/2012/01/scientists-are-people-too/

  12. Normal science vs paradigm shifts • “Normal science” operates within a particular paradigm • - Much more than just the prevailing theory – defines working methods of those scientists in the field. • Conservative http://velocity.uwaterloo.ca/2012/03/applying-scientific-concepts-startups-idea/

  13. Normal science vs paradigm shifts • In “normal science”, if the experiment doesn’t work, the scientist assumes she has done something wrong. • Her results don’t agree with the paradigm – therefore she’s wrong. • Kuhn dismissive of Popper’s falsification thesis

  14. Normal science vs paradigm shifts From the introduction to the 50th anniversary edition: "Normal science does not aim at novelty but at clearing up the status quo. It tends to discover what it expects to discover.” Ian Hacking

  15. Paradigm shifts • …but anomalies build up. • - Trigger “crisis of confidence” • - Revolution. • - Paradigm shift. • - Major shift – “step change” in science, rather than incremental progress • (Perhaps most contentious of all) --values and beliefs of scientists key to acceptance of new paradigm

  16. Paradigm shifts

  17. Paradigm shifts .”.. crisis alone is not enough. There must also be a basis, though it need be neither rational nor ultimately correct, for faith in the particular candidate chosen. Something must make at least a few scientists feel that the new proposal is on the right track, and sometimes it is only personal and inarticulate aesthetic considerations that can do that.... ” • Scientists driven by more than just rational consideration of the data and evidence. • Peer pressure and “faith” important according to Kuhn.

  18. Seeing is believing?

  19. Incommensurability “The normal-scientific tradition that emerges from a scientific revolution is not only incompatible but often actually incommensurable with that which has gone before” But in QM we have the correspondence principle. Similarly, we make sure that relativistic equations reduce to appropriate classical limit. http://3.sabideli.com/thomas-kuhn/thomas-kuhn-1.html

  20. I would consider a career which involved politics • Over my dead body. • Disagree • Perhaps. Possibly. Maybe. • Agree • This is what I want to do with my life.

  21. Should scientific evidence always drive government policy?

  22. So, should we leave politics to the politicians..?

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