Title: Karl Poppers Philosophy
1Karl Poppers Philosophy
- Critical Rationalism
- And
- Emancipation through Knowledge
2Karl Raymond Popper1902-1996
- Birth Place Vienna (Austria)
- Career Cabinetmaker, Health care assistance,
School Master, Philosophy Professor - Major Publications Logic of Scientific Discovery
(1932/1968) Open Society and its Enemies (1945)
Poverty of Historicism (1935/1957) Conjecture
and Refutations (1963) )objective Knowledge
(1970) Realism and the Aim of Science (1985)
Knowledge and the Body-Mind Problem (1994)The
Myth of the Framework (1994) In Search of Better
World (1995 ) The Lesson o this Century (2000)
All Life is Problem-solving (2001).
3Critical RationalismThe Main Aspects of a
Rational Way of Life -1
- The quest for knowledge and truth, for
emancipation through knowledge, and spiritual
freedom
4Critical RationalismThe Main Aspects of a
Rational Way of Life -2
- The critical attitude that -recognizing that any
particular expression of the truth is fallible,
limited, not final- seeks undogmatically to
subject all attitudes, ideas, institutions,
traditions, so-called knowledge and so-called
freedom, to critical examination and appraisal
Rationalists are those people who are ready to
challenge and to criticize everything, including
their own tradition.
5Critical RationalismThe Main Aspects of a
Rational Way of Life -3
- Willingness to learn from others We must
recognize everybody with whom we communicate as a
potential source of argument and of reasonable
information and take the attitude that I may be
wrong and you may be right, and by an effort, we
may get nearer to the truth.
6A bit of Historical Intellectual Background
- Psychoanalysis (Freud), Individual Psychology
(Adler) -
- Marxism
- Positivism (Mach) Logical Positivism
- And the significance of Confirming Evidence
7Einsteins Crucial Experiment
8Two Main Problems of Epistemology
- Problem of Demarcation
- Problem of Induction
9Demarcation and Induction(once again)
- Logical Positivists Response
- Demarcation Principle of Verifiability
- Induction No Problem
- Poppers Response
- Demarcation Principle of Falsifiability
- Induction There is no such a thing as inductive
reasoning
10All Life Is Problem-Solving
11All Knowledge is Conjectural
- Knowledge vs. Scepticism
- Knowledge Justified True Belief
- Knowledge Reliable True Belief
- Knowledge, the Progress of Knowledge, and
rejection of scepticism - Corroboration in place of confirmation
12Main Aspects of the Popperian System of Thought
(1)
- In The Field of Metaphysics
- Realism
- Non-Humean causality
- Propensities and Tendencies
- Conjectural Essentialism
- Rejection of determinism
- Theory of three worlds
13Theory of Three worlds (1)as a link between
metaphysics and epistemology
14Theory of Three worlds (2)
15Main Aspects of the Popperian System of Thought
(2)
- In the Field of Epistemology
- Objective Knowledge (Knowledge without a knowing
subject) - Correspondence theory of Truth
- Verisimilitude (Truth as the final goal of
investigations) - Epistemic Pluralism
- Critical Rationalism
- Evolutionary Epistemology
- Rejection of relativism, dogmatism,
justificationism, foundationalism, and scepticism - Intellectual Honesty
16Main Aspects of the Popperian System of Thought
(3)
- In the Field of Methodology
- Falisificationism
- Conjectures and Refutations
- Criticism as a method (empirical and discursive)
17Main Aspects of the Popperian System of Thought
(4)
- In the Field of Political and Social Sciences
- Negative utilitarianism
- Piecemeal social engineering and anti-utopianism
- Moral responsibility of individuals
- Freedom and social justice
- Liberal democracy
- Open society Rejection of despotism,
totalitarianism, and historicism
18What Is Situational Logic?-1
- R G Collingwood I his book The Idea of History
stated that historical knowledge, or historical
understanding, consists in the re-enactment by
the historian of past experience. - Suppose a historian is reading the Theodosian
Code, and has before him a certain edict of an
emperor. Merely reading the words and being able
to translate them does not amount to knowing
their historical significance. In order to do
that he must envisage the situation with which
the emperor was trying to deal, and he must
envisage it as that emperor envisaged it. Then he
must see for himself, just as if the emperors
situation were his own, how such a situation
might be dealt with he must see the possible
alternatives, and the reasons for choosing one
rather than another and thus he must go through
the process which the emperor went through in
deciding on this particular course. Thus he is
re-enacting in his own mind the experience of the
emperor and only in so far as he does this has
he any historical knowledge, as distinct from a
merely philological knowledge, of the meaning of
the edict. - Or again, suppose he is reading a passage of an
ancient philosopher. Once more, he must know the
language in a philological sense and be able to
construe but by doing that he has not yet
understood the passage as an historian of
philosophy must understand it. In order to do
that, he must see what the philosophical problem
was, of which his author is here stating his
solution. He must think that problem out for
himself, see what possible solutions of it might
be offered, and see why this particular
philosopher chose that solution instead of
another. This means re-thinking for himself the
thought of his author and nothing short of that
will make him the historian of that authors
philosophy. (p.283)
19What Is Situational Logic?-2
- The method of situational logic differs from the
method of re-enactment or empathy in the
following ways - It is based on objective situational and
institutional analysis and not subjective act of
empathy. - It works by reconstructing the social situation
in which the actor(s)/ agent(s) act, treating
their aims not as psychological facts, but as
elements of the objective social situation. - The reconstructed situation is open to scrutiny
and criticism and therefore further refinement.
20What Is Situational Logic?-3
- Situations (Social, Economic, Moral, Political,
Historical , ) Consist of - Physical environments and entities
- Social Institutions
- Other actors/agents
21What Is Situational Logic?- 4
- The following are assigned to each actor in a
given situation - A number of aims and objectives
- A certain amount of background knowledge
- A principle of rationality.
22What Is Situational Logic?- 5
- Rationality vs. the Principle of Rationality
(Charity) - Rationality
- Avoidance of contradictions in thought and in
action - Aim-oriented behaviour Problem-solving attitude
- Criticism as a method
- Principle of Rationality (Charity)
- What to do with seemingly irrational actions?
(for example Driver in the wrong side of the
highway)
23What Is Situational Logic?-6
- Situations (once again) how do we
determine/define/individuate situations? - Reality vs. Facts (physical and social)
- Situations actual vs. counterfactual
24Social Sciences vs. Physical Sciences
- Are There No Laws in Social Sciences?
- Experiments in the Social and Physical sciences
- The Role of Social Actors/Agents in the Social
Sciences - Holism and Essentialism in the Social Sciences
- Trends, Processes and Large-Scale Predictions
- Explanation vs. Understanding
- Social Sciences and Technology
- Objectivity in the Social Sciences