NEIL W. TENNANT

tennant.9@osu.edu

If you email me, please use the header PHIL 655: YOURNAME.


Professor
Department of Philosophy



Spring Term 2005

PHIL 655: Philosophy of Science

Lecture/Seminar
48 Derby Hall
9:30 - 11:18 a.m.

Aims of this course. We aim to become conversant with all the major concepts and controversies of mainstream discussion in the 'general' philosophy of science (as opposed to its more specialized areas, such as the philosophy of quantum physics).

Topics. We shall be covering topics drawn from the following list: The structure of scientific theories; theory-ladenness of observational evidence; the Quine-Duhem problem; commensurability of competing scientific theories; simplicity; rationality of scientific change; the criterion of cognitive significance; the nature of scientific paradigms; conceptual change in science.

Textbook: Ian Hacking, ed., Scientific Revolutions, Oxford Readings in Philosophy, 1981.

Additional Reading: Neil Tennant, The Taming of The True, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1997 (pbk. edn. 2002); chapter 11, on cognitive significance.

Background reading
(those in bold face are on Reserve in the Main Library):

A useful on-line bibliography in philosophy of science

Assessment:
Item Date due Weight
Class presentation Monday of the week in question 20%
Term paper Wednesday, June 1 80%
Class attendance and participation Every session! An adjustment factor

Policy on attendance at classes

Plagiarism

Advice on writing essays

Term paper due on tba; worth 80% of grade.

Write about 4000 words on one of the following topics. The material will be easy to find in the textbook.

1. @.

2. @.

3. @.