The fundamental principle, which functions as an axiom, and can be stated in symbolic logic, is that a thing is good insofar as it exemplifies its concept. To put it another way, "a thing is good if it has all its descriptive properties." This means, according to Hartman, that the good thing has a name, that the name has a meaning defined by a set of properties, and that the thing possesses all of the properties in the set. A thing is bad if it does not fulfill its description. If it doesn't fulfill its definition it is terrible (awful, miserable.) A car, by definition, has brakes. A car which accelerates when the brakes are applied is an awful car, since a car by definition must have brakes. A horse, if we called it a car, would be an even worse car, with fewer of the properties of a car. The name we put on things is very important: it sets the norm for how we judge them.
This video outlines the value-free ideal in philosophy of science, and then presents one of the central challenges to this ideal, the argument from inductive risk.
Join my discord: https://discord.gg/RUjwFdDDtK
My patreon: https://www.patreon.com/kanebaker91
Articles mentioned:
Heather Douglas, "Inductive risk and values in science"
Justin Biddle, "Transient underdetermination and values in science"
Richard Jeffrey, "Valuation and acceptance of scientific hypothesis"
Richard Rudner, "The scientist qua scientist makes value judgments"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Scientific objectivity"
0:00 - The value-free ideal
11:53 - Inductive risk
20:30 - Objections
31:32 - Extending inductive risk
39:39 - Eliminating value judgment?
published: 25 Apr 2022
Philosophy of Science Lecture #10: Science and Value Judgments
published: 08 Sep 2014
🧬Should We Pursue Value-Free Science? 🔭 with Dr. Kevin Elliott (Chasing Leviathan) #podcast #science
In this episode of the Chasing Leviathan podcast, PJ and Dr. Kevin Elliott discuss the ethics of scientific research, focusing on whether it would be ideal for science to be "value free."
For a deep dive into Dr. Kevin Elliott's work, check out his book:
Values in Science (Elements in the Philosophy of Science) 👉 https://www.amazon.com/Values-Science-Elements-Philosophy/dp/1009055631
For a commercial-free experience with better audio, subscribe to the Chasing Leviathan podcast here 👉 https://open.spotify.c/show/3nfeOTGygv8tcSUY94BUQD
#chasingleviathan #philosophypodcast #philosophy #bigquestions #listenable #kevinelliott #philosophyofscience #ethics #scientific #scientificmethod #research #scientificresearch #covidresearch #bigquestions #learntolisten
Check out our blog on www.candidg...
published: 13 Sep 2022
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
Link to this course:
https://click.linksynergy.com/deeplink?id=Gw/ETjJoU9M&mid=40328&murl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.coursera.org%2Flearn%2Fphilosophy-of-science
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
For the last four centuries, scientists have aimed to provide us with an understanding of the world around us. By all appearances, science has made substantial progress during this time. But is this progress real or illusory? And if it is real, how has this progress been made? This four-week course will consider these important questions. Specific topics will include how scientists generate knowledge through observations, experiments, and simulations; scientific objectivity and failures of scientific objectivity; the self-correcting nature of the scientific community; the positiv...
published: 09 Nov 2020
Part One: The Science of Value with Peter Demarest
The first in a four-part series of interviews with Peter Demarest, an expert in the science of Axiogenics, which is the mind-brain science of value generation. He has influenced my life greatly through his book, “Answering the Central Question: How Science reveals the keys to success in life, love, and leadership.”
Stephen R. Covey writes about Peter’s book saying, “…Based on the groundbreaking science of applied neuro-axiology, this book reveals the how-to principles for integrating your heart, mind, and brain to unleash your strengths and create a truly extraordinary life.”
This interview will begin to reveal to you how valuable you are and how you can generate value through your courageous voice.
published: 28 Feb 2020
Science is autonomous and "value-free" #philosophy #criticalthinking #science #philosophyofscience
From my video "Science, pseudoscience, and ethics": https://youtu.be/EImzyJPxpwM?si=-mhAjl3w4ThGnUTj
published: 08 Aug 2024
STATISTICS Concepts for Data Science pt.6 - P-Value
Statistics is a key skill to make you a successful data analyst or data scientist.
🤌 SO WHAT
In this series of short clips, I'll do my best to explain the main statistical concepts that you need to get familiar with.
👨💻 LET ME BE YOUR MENTOR
https://topmate.io/loresowhat
📸 SOCIAL
Instagram and TikTok - @Loresowhat
📩 Get in touch:
[email protected]
#statistics #datascience
published: 30 Jun 2023
Scientists know its real value... 🔬🧪#science #scientist #periodictable #chemistry #elements
published: 26 Nov 2024
Value Vs Reference Types in C#coding #dotnet #tech #programming #coding
published: 09 Dec 2024
The Inherent Value of Humanity #podcast #science
Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH2PLuQwGuY_Q9NvNng7Twg/join
Join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/InstituteforCreationResearch
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This video outlines the value-free ideal in philosophy of science, and then presents one of the central challenges to this ideal, the argument from inductive ri...
This video outlines the value-free ideal in philosophy of science, and then presents one of the central challenges to this ideal, the argument from inductive risk.
Join my discord: https://discord.gg/RUjwFdDDtK
My patreon: https://www.patreon.com/kanebaker91
Articles mentioned:
Heather Douglas, "Inductive risk and values in science"
Justin Biddle, "Transient underdetermination and values in science"
Richard Jeffrey, "Valuation and acceptance of scientific hypothesis"
Richard Rudner, "The scientist qua scientist makes value judgments"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Scientific objectivity"
0:00 - The value-free ideal
11:53 - Inductive risk
20:30 - Objections
31:32 - Extending inductive risk
39:39 - Eliminating value judgment?
This video outlines the value-free ideal in philosophy of science, and then presents one of the central challenges to this ideal, the argument from inductive risk.
Join my discord: https://discord.gg/RUjwFdDDtK
My patreon: https://www.patreon.com/kanebaker91
Articles mentioned:
Heather Douglas, "Inductive risk and values in science"
Justin Biddle, "Transient underdetermination and values in science"
Richard Jeffrey, "Valuation and acceptance of scientific hypothesis"
Richard Rudner, "The scientist qua scientist makes value judgments"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Scientific objectivity"
0:00 - The value-free ideal
11:53 - Inductive risk
20:30 - Objections
31:32 - Extending inductive risk
39:39 - Eliminating value judgment?
In this episode of the Chasing Leviathan podcast, PJ and Dr. Kevin Elliott discuss the ethics of scientific research, focusing on whether it would be ideal for ...
In this episode of the Chasing Leviathan podcast, PJ and Dr. Kevin Elliott discuss the ethics of scientific research, focusing on whether it would be ideal for science to be "value free."
For a deep dive into Dr. Kevin Elliott's work, check out his book:
Values in Science (Elements in the Philosophy of Science) 👉 https://www.amazon.com/Values-Science-Elements-Philosophy/dp/1009055631
For a commercial-free experience with better audio, subscribe to the Chasing Leviathan podcast here 👉 https://open.spotify.c/show/3nfeOTGygv8tcSUY94BUQD
#chasingleviathan #philosophypodcast #philosophy #bigquestions #listenable #kevinelliott #philosophyofscience #ethics #scientific #scientificmethod #research #scientificresearch #covidresearch #bigquestions #learntolisten
Check out our blog on www.candidgoatproductions.com
Who thinks that they can subdue Leviathan? Strength resides in its neck; dismay goes before it. When it rises up, the mighty are terrified. Nothing on earth is its equal. It is without fear. It looks down on all who are haughty; it is king over all who are proud.
These words inspired PJ Wehry to create Chasing Leviathan. Chasing Leviathan was born out of two ideals: that truth is worth pursuing but will never be subjugated, and the discipline of listening is one of the most important habits anyone can develop.
Every episode is a dialogue, a journey into the depths of a meaningful question explored through the lens of personal experience or professional expertise.
In this episode of the Chasing Leviathan podcast, PJ and Dr. Kevin Elliott discuss the ethics of scientific research, focusing on whether it would be ideal for science to be "value free."
For a deep dive into Dr. Kevin Elliott's work, check out his book:
Values in Science (Elements in the Philosophy of Science) 👉 https://www.amazon.com/Values-Science-Elements-Philosophy/dp/1009055631
For a commercial-free experience with better audio, subscribe to the Chasing Leviathan podcast here 👉 https://open.spotify.c/show/3nfeOTGygv8tcSUY94BUQD
#chasingleviathan #philosophypodcast #philosophy #bigquestions #listenable #kevinelliott #philosophyofscience #ethics #scientific #scientificmethod #research #scientificresearch #covidresearch #bigquestions #learntolisten
Check out our blog on www.candidgoatproductions.com
Who thinks that they can subdue Leviathan? Strength resides in its neck; dismay goes before it. When it rises up, the mighty are terrified. Nothing on earth is its equal. It is without fear. It looks down on all who are haughty; it is king over all who are proud.
These words inspired PJ Wehry to create Chasing Leviathan. Chasing Leviathan was born out of two ideals: that truth is worth pursuing but will never be subjugated, and the discipline of listening is one of the most important habits anyone can develop.
Every episode is a dialogue, a journey into the depths of a meaningful question explored through the lens of personal experience or professional expertise.
Link to this course:
https://click.linksynergy.com/deeplink?id=Gw/ETjJoU9M&mid=40328&murl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.coursera.org%2Flearn%2Fphilosophy-of-science
4.2 – S...
Link to this course:
https://click.linksynergy.com/deeplink?id=Gw/ETjJoU9M&mid=40328&murl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.coursera.org%2Flearn%2Fphilosophy-of-science
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
For the last four centuries, scientists have aimed to provide us with an understanding of the world around us. By all appearances, science has made substantial progress during this time. But is this progress real or illusory? And if it is real, how has this progress been made? This four-week course will consider these important questions. Specific topics will include how scientists generate knowledge through observations, experiments, and simulations; scientific objectivity and failures of scientific objectivity; the self-correcting nature of the scientific community; the positive and negative influences that values can have on science; the relationship between science and religion; and the role of the public in guiding the scientific enterprise.
It was great session. I enjoyed and learned a lot. Kindly share some more science andvart integrated course. English proficiency and writing skills course also.,Help me to go back to my philosophy course as undergrad. This is a remind of critical thinking and how do you examine science and its contents. Great course
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.
Link to this course:
https://click.linksynergy.com/deeplink?id=Gw/ETjJoU9M&mid=40328&murl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.coursera.org%2Flearn%2Fphilosophy-of-science
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
For the last four centuries, scientists have aimed to provide us with an understanding of the world around us. By all appearances, science has made substantial progress during this time. But is this progress real or illusory? And if it is real, how has this progress been made? This four-week course will consider these important questions. Specific topics will include how scientists generate knowledge through observations, experiments, and simulations; scientific objectivity and failures of scientific objectivity; the self-correcting nature of the scientific community; the positive and negative influences that values can have on science; the relationship between science and religion; and the role of the public in guiding the scientific enterprise.
It was great session. I enjoyed and learned a lot. Kindly share some more science andvart integrated course. English proficiency and writing skills course also.,Help me to go back to my philosophy course as undergrad. This is a remind of critical thinking and how do you examine science and its contents. Great course
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.
The first in a four-part series of interviews with Peter Demarest, an expert in the science of Axiogenics, which is the mind-brain science of value generation. ...
The first in a four-part series of interviews with Peter Demarest, an expert in the science of Axiogenics, which is the mind-brain science of value generation. He has influenced my life greatly through his book, “Answering the Central Question: How Science reveals the keys to success in life, love, and leadership.”
Stephen R. Covey writes about Peter’s book saying, “…Based on the groundbreaking science of applied neuro-axiology, this book reveals the how-to principles for integrating your heart, mind, and brain to unleash your strengths and create a truly extraordinary life.”
This interview will begin to reveal to you how valuable you are and how you can generate value through your courageous voice.
The first in a four-part series of interviews with Peter Demarest, an expert in the science of Axiogenics, which is the mind-brain science of value generation. He has influenced my life greatly through his book, “Answering the Central Question: How Science reveals the keys to success in life, love, and leadership.”
Stephen R. Covey writes about Peter’s book saying, “…Based on the groundbreaking science of applied neuro-axiology, this book reveals the how-to principles for integrating your heart, mind, and brain to unleash your strengths and create a truly extraordinary life.”
This interview will begin to reveal to you how valuable you are and how you can generate value through your courageous voice.
Statistics is a key skill to make you a successful data analyst or data scientist.
🤌 SO WHAT
In this series of short clips, I'll do my best to explain the main...
Statistics is a key skill to make you a successful data analyst or data scientist.
🤌 SO WHAT
In this series of short clips, I'll do my best to explain the main statistical concepts that you need to get familiar with.
👨💻 LET ME BE YOUR MENTOR
https://topmate.io/loresowhat
📸 SOCIAL
Instagram and TikTok - @Loresowhat
📩 Get in touch:
[email protected]
#statistics #datascience
Statistics is a key skill to make you a successful data analyst or data scientist.
🤌 SO WHAT
In this series of short clips, I'll do my best to explain the main statistical concepts that you need to get familiar with.
👨💻 LET ME BE YOUR MENTOR
https://topmate.io/loresowhat
📸 SOCIAL
Instagram and TikTok - @Loresowhat
📩 Get in touch:
[email protected]
#statistics #datascience
Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH2PLuQwGuY_Q9NvNng7Twg/join
Join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Institutefo...
Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH2PLuQwGuY_Q9NvNng7Twg/join
Join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/InstituteforCreationResearch
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Follow us! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/icrscience
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TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@icrscience
This video outlines the value-free ideal in philosophy of science, and then presents one of the central challenges to this ideal, the argument from inductive risk.
Join my discord: https://discord.gg/RUjwFdDDtK
My patreon: https://www.patreon.com/kanebaker91
Articles mentioned:
Heather Douglas, "Inductive risk and values in science"
Justin Biddle, "Transient underdetermination and values in science"
Richard Jeffrey, "Valuation and acceptance of scientific hypothesis"
Richard Rudner, "The scientist qua scientist makes value judgments"
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "Scientific objectivity"
0:00 - The value-free ideal
11:53 - Inductive risk
20:30 - Objections
31:32 - Extending inductive risk
39:39 - Eliminating value judgment?
In this episode of the Chasing Leviathan podcast, PJ and Dr. Kevin Elliott discuss the ethics of scientific research, focusing on whether it would be ideal for science to be "value free."
For a deep dive into Dr. Kevin Elliott's work, check out his book:
Values in Science (Elements in the Philosophy of Science) 👉 https://www.amazon.com/Values-Science-Elements-Philosophy/dp/1009055631
For a commercial-free experience with better audio, subscribe to the Chasing Leviathan podcast here 👉 https://open.spotify.c/show/3nfeOTGygv8tcSUY94BUQD
#chasingleviathan #philosophypodcast #philosophy #bigquestions #listenable #kevinelliott #philosophyofscience #ethics #scientific #scientificmethod #research #scientificresearch #covidresearch #bigquestions #learntolisten
Check out our blog on www.candidgoatproductions.com
Who thinks that they can subdue Leviathan? Strength resides in its neck; dismay goes before it. When it rises up, the mighty are terrified. Nothing on earth is its equal. It is without fear. It looks down on all who are haughty; it is king over all who are proud.
These words inspired PJ Wehry to create Chasing Leviathan. Chasing Leviathan was born out of two ideals: that truth is worth pursuing but will never be subjugated, and the discipline of listening is one of the most important habits anyone can develop.
Every episode is a dialogue, a journey into the depths of a meaningful question explored through the lens of personal experience or professional expertise.
Link to this course:
https://click.linksynergy.com/deeplink?id=Gw/ETjJoU9M&mid=40328&murl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.coursera.org%2Flearn%2Fphilosophy-of-science
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
For the last four centuries, scientists have aimed to provide us with an understanding of the world around us. By all appearances, science has made substantial progress during this time. But is this progress real or illusory? And if it is real, how has this progress been made? This four-week course will consider these important questions. Specific topics will include how scientists generate knowledge through observations, experiments, and simulations; scientific objectivity and failures of scientific objectivity; the self-correcting nature of the scientific community; the positive and negative influences that values can have on science; the relationship between science and religion; and the role of the public in guiding the scientific enterprise.
It was great session. I enjoyed and learned a lot. Kindly share some more science andvart integrated course. English proficiency and writing skills course also.,Help me to go back to my philosophy course as undergrad. This is a remind of critical thinking and how do you examine science and its contents. Great course
4.2 – Should Science Be Value-Free? - Philosophy of Science
Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.
The first in a four-part series of interviews with Peter Demarest, an expert in the science of Axiogenics, which is the mind-brain science of value generation. He has influenced my life greatly through his book, “Answering the Central Question: How Science reveals the keys to success in life, love, and leadership.”
Stephen R. Covey writes about Peter’s book saying, “…Based on the groundbreaking science of applied neuro-axiology, this book reveals the how-to principles for integrating your heart, mind, and brain to unleash your strengths and create a truly extraordinary life.”
This interview will begin to reveal to you how valuable you are and how you can generate value through your courageous voice.
Statistics is a key skill to make you a successful data analyst or data scientist.
🤌 SO WHAT
In this series of short clips, I'll do my best to explain the main statistical concepts that you need to get familiar with.
👨💻 LET ME BE YOUR MENTOR
https://topmate.io/loresowhat
📸 SOCIAL
Instagram and TikTok - @Loresowhat
📩 Get in touch:
[email protected]
#statistics #datascience
Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH2PLuQwGuY_Q9NvNng7Twg/join
Join us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/InstituteforCreationResearch
---
Follow us! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/icrscience
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/icrscience/
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LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/institute-for-creation-research
Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/icrscience/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@icrscience
The fundamental principle, which functions as an axiom, and can be stated in symbolic logic, is that a thing is good insofar as it exemplifies its concept. To put it another way, "a thing is good if it has all its descriptive properties." This means, according to Hartman, that the good thing has a name, that the name has a meaning defined by a set of properties, and that the thing possesses all of the properties in the set. A thing is bad if it does not fulfill its description. If it doesn't fulfill its definition it is terrible (awful, miserable.) A car, by definition, has brakes. A car which accelerates when the brakes are applied is an awful car, since a car by definition must have brakes. A horse, if we called it a car, would be an even worse car, with fewer of the properties of a car. The name we put on things is very important: it sets the norm for how we judge them.