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Title: I


1
Ive had a few Duh! moments of late
  • The online quiz for todays reading included
    questions about auxiliary assumptions as Hempel
    argued for them but the editor of our volume
    cut out the 2 relevant paragraphs I should have
    caught it! Well cover the issue.
  • On question 20 of the test, you were correct if
    you did not choose (b) concerning evidence of
    writing. First of all, it wasnt in the film
    and second, thats because it comes much later!
    So your TA will give you the point if you lost
    one for not choosing it and if you did choose
    it, no penalty. Youre just up one point.

2
Lets talk essays
  • As the material of one link suggests,
    philosophical papers often include an argument
    for a thesis.
  • But, in this essay, your priority is explicating
    the reasoning/argument of the scientist or
    scientists on whom you focus how they reasons
    from an artifact they can observe to the
    existence of some cognitive (mental) capacity in
    an ancestor group they cannot observe.
  • You are asked to evaluate the reasoning, but that
    is not the main project of this first essay.

3
Lets talk essays
  • You may or may not include a brief introduction.
    Do so when you believe your analysis needs some
    framing
  • Describe the artifact you have chosen clearly
    (you need not add specific dates proposed for its
    age, or place it was found) just what
    scientists take it to be (e.g., a decorative
    bead, a tool for hunting large animals, a
    painting)
  • Then outline (not literally) their argument for
    a hypothesis concerning some mental capacity they
    think it points to (serves as evidence of).

4
Lets talk essays
  • Back to the beads
  • Artifact shells that have been uniformly
    polished and pierced to allow for
    hanging/stringing and many of them in particular
    spots.
  • Evidence that these people were willing to spend
    thousands of hours engaging in a project without
    (at least obvious) survival value.
  • Evidence of how they were made, and thus how
    labor-intensive the process of making them
  • Hypothesis the beads were used to reflect
    social identity perhaps I am a member of this
    tribe

5
Lets talk essays
  • Back to the beads
  • Surely, they serve as evidence for a hypothesis
    that at this time in our history, humans were
    engaging in activities that demonstrate
    creativity and/or artistic expression and,
    perhaps, interest in symbolizing social identity
  • But you might think (as I do) that the move to I
    am a mother of 3 is something of a leap.

6
Lets talk essays
  • Back to the beads
  • So after youve laid out the argument for the
    hypothesis being offered, you are asked to
    evaluate it.
  • How does one go about doing this when, as in this
    case, we cannot directly observe the folks we are
    hypothesizing about?
  • Its not enough that the hypothesis would
    explain the artifact
  • But ask, rather, whether there are equally
    plausible (even one) alternative hypotheses that
    would work equally well. Then the reasoning isnt
    as strong as it might first appear.

7
Lets talk essays
  • Back to the beads
  • So, in the case of the beads, it seems that to
    assume they represented social identity beyond
    just something like I belong to this group is
    not really that strong. For alternatives
  • The beads were actually used as barter, and had
    no more meaning than that
  • Or the beads just signaled group membership
  • Exist.
  • And perhaps the social identity hypothesis relies
    too much on imposing our way of thinking today on
    early ancestors

8
Narrow (or naïve) inductivism
  • Collect facts ? Categorize them ? Generalize to a
    hypothesis ? Test the hypothesis
  • Hypothesis
  • Induction Deduction
  • Facts Facts

9
Problems
  • The problem of induction (which, as empiricists,
    they should have known about!)
  • More importantly, the mismatch between their
    model of discovery and actual historical cases of
    discovery, which seem to involve (not all at once
    but regularly)
  • Luck
  • Accidents
  • Crazy reasoning
  • How to fix these problems?
  • One answer give up on an account of discovery
    of hypotheses or theories
  • Focus instead on the logic of testing them once
    discovered emphasizing, again, logical
    reasoning and experience

10
New approach Distinguishing between the contexts
of discovery and justification
  • Context of discovery
  • The reasoning involved in the discovery of
    hypotheses or theories.
  • Inductive? Creative? Luck? Synthesis?
  • Any such account should be compatible with the
    history and current practice of science.
  • Context of justification
  • The reasoning involved in the testing of
    hypotheses or theories.
  • Deductive, inductive, or something else?
  • Any such account should be compatible with the
    history and current practice of science.

11
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  • Ignaz Semmelweis
  • The savior of mothers
  • In 1847, identified putrid material and bad
    hygiene on the part of medical practitioners as
    implicated in childbed fever
  • His findings were rejected by the medical
    community
  • He suffered a nervous breakdown and was
    institutionalized
  • Death reported as a suicide turned out to be
    murder

12
Hempels inductivism (scientific reasoning is
inductive in a wider sense)
  • The identification or recognition of a problem
    (something to be explained)
  • Consideration or generation of hypotheses
  • Consideration are proposed hypotheses
    compatible with other things we know?
  • Generation creativity, accidents, luck NOT
    induction or any other logical process
  • Choosing one or more hypotheses to test (figuring
    out how)
  • Tests
  • Confirmation (inductive!) or falsification (more
    complicated than logical argument form suggests)

13
Hempels inductivism (scientific reasoning is
inductive in a wider sense)
  • The identification or recognition of a problem
    the case of Semmelweis as representative
  • One general problem Childbed fever
  • A more specific problem Why the rates were much
    higher in Division One than in Division Two of
    the same hospital? (In a sense providing a
    natural experiment)
  • Consideration or generation of hypotheses
  • Some are already current
  • Telluric influences, crowding, diet, examination
    techniques, dread caused by the priest, delivery
    position?
  • Which ones does he test? And of those he doesnt,
    why not? Which can he test directly? Which
    indirectly?

14
Hempels inductivism
  • If childbed fever is caused by telluric
    influences, women in both divisions should
    contract it at equal rates, as should women who
    deliver in home or in the street.
  • Women who deliver in the second division, as well
    as women who deliver at home and in the street,
    do not contract childbed fever at the same rate
    as those in the first division
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --
  • So, childbed fever is not caused by telluric
    influences.

15
Hempels inductivism
  • The diets are the same in the two divisions
  • Midwives in the 2nd division use the same
    examination techniques as med students in the 1st
    division
  • Its not due to overcrowding in the 1st division,
    as it is the 2nd that is overcrowded

16
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  • If childbed fever is caused by dread brought on
    by the priest bringing last rites (here the 2
    wards differ), then changing the priests route
    so women in the 1st division dont see him will
    result in a drop in cases.
  • The priests route is changed.
  • There is no drop in cases
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --
  • Childbed fever is not caused by dread brought on
    by the priest bringing last rites.

17
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  • If H, then I
  • Not I
  • ------------------
  • Not H
  • Modus Tollens
  • Deductively valid
  • Will come to be called the logic of
    falsification.
  • Hempel is himself focusing on the logic of
    confirmation.

18
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  • If childbed fever is caused by a womans position
    in delivery (here the 2 wards differ), then
    changing womens positions in the 1st division
    should lead to a drop in cases.
  • Womens positions in the 1st ward are changed.
  • There is no drop in cases
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --
  • Childbed fever is not caused by delivery
    position.
  • Modus Tollens again.

19
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  1. Semmelweis arrives at his first confirmed
    hypothesis because of an accident the poisoning
    of a surgical colleague whose skin was punctured
    by a scalpel during an autopsy.
  2. Why think of cadaveric material as a likely
    cause?
  3. His colleagues illness was just like that of
    women who died of childbed fever.
  4. As importantly, only women in the first division
    were examined by medical students directly after
    the students performed autopsies and did not
    wash their hands.

20
Hempel The logic of confirmation
  • If childbed fever is caused by cadaveric
    material, then if medical students wash their
    hands in a solution of chlorinated lime, there
    will be a drop in the number of cases.
  • Medical students wash their hands in the
    solution.
  • There is a drop in cases of childbed fever.
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --
  • So, childbed fever is caused by cadaveric
    material.

21
Hempels initial schema
  • If H, then I1, I2 and In
  • I1, I2 and In
  • -----------------------------------
  • H
  • Why is this form of argument inductive?
  • However many confirmations the hypothesis enjoys,
    these are finite in number, and can only show
    that some hypothesis which is a generalization
    or universal statement is probable.
  • We have the same gap that occurs in empirical
    generalizations though the order of reasoning
    is reversed!
  • And, of course, it turns out the Semmelweis
    initial hypothesis is wrong (or at least just
    partial)

22
Hempel on the problems of confirmation
  • Yes, confirmation can only demonstrate the
    probability of a hypothesis
  • But every positive test is one which opened the
    possibility that the hypothesis would be
    falsified.
  • The more confirmations a hypothesis enjoys, the
    more warranted we are in (provisionally)
    accepting it as the basis for further research.
  • Moreover deductive logic has its limits as well
  • Even in mathematics or formal logic,
    deductively valid arguments or proofs do not
    themselves dictate any specific conclusion
    indeed, an infinite number of results will follow
    logically.

23
Hempel on the problems of confirmation
  • Moreover deductive logic has its limits as well
  • In logic, for example, we can prove the
    following
  • P
  • ---
  • P or Q (or is inclusive in logic at least one
    is true)
  • And from P or Q, we can prove P or Q or R

24
Hempel on the problems of falsification
  • Moreover deductive logic as used in science has
    has a second problem.
  • Consider the deductively valid argument form of
    the logic of falsification (Modus Tollens)
  • If P, then Q or If H, then I
  • Not Q Not I
  • --------------- --------------
  • Not P Not H

25
Hempel on the problems of confirmation
  • Imagine that the experiment went differently
  • If childbed fever is caused by cadaveric
    material, then if medical students wash their
    hands in a solution of chlorinated lime, there
    will be a drop in the number of cases.
  • There is no drop.
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --
  • Childbed fever is not caused by cadaveric
    material
  • but should we conclude that?
  • After all, there were good reasons to believe it
    was.

26
The logic of falsification
  • If childbed fever is caused by cadaveric
    material, then if medical students wash their
    hands in a solution of chlorinated lime, there
    will be a drop in the number of cases.
  • What might we ask?
  • Did the medical students wash their hands?
  • Did they wash their hands after examining each
    patient?
  • Was the solution strong enough?
  • Does chlorinated lime kill whatever it is that
    cadaveric material contains and causes childbed
    fever?

27
Hempel Getting a better understanding of the
logic of testing
  • It is never just H that yields the prediction I
  • Auxiliary assumptions such as
  • Ceteris paribus (all things being equal)
  • Ive identified all the variables that might
    affect the outcome of the experiment
  • Lime solution can kill the infectious agents that
    cause childbed fever Students washed their
    hands
  • If (H A1) (A2 and An) then I.
  • Not I
  • ---------------------------------------------
  • Not (H A1) (A2 and An)

28
Complications in the logic of testing
  • It is never just H that yields the prediction I
  • A historical case.
  • Tycho Brahe reasoned
  • If the Copernican hypothesis is true, then we
    should observe stellar parallax (a change in the
    angle of a given star to an observer as the earth
    moves).
  • We do not observe stellar parallax.
  • -------------------------------------------------
    -----
  • So, the Copernican hypothesis is false.

29
Complications in the logic of testing
  • If the Copernican hypothesis is true, then we
    should observe stellar parallax (a change in the
    angle of a given star to an observer as the earth
    moves).
  • A The stars are close enough that stellar
    parallax would be seen by the naked eye.
  • We do not observe stellar parallax.
  • -------------------------------------------------
    -----
  • So, not (H and A)!

30
Back to the logic of discovery
  • Hempel cites examples, such as Kekules discovery
    of the structure of the Benzene molecule, as
    evidence that there is no logic to discovery (nor
    given testing need we worry about that)
  • Other examples that support him
  • Alfred Wallace, who also came up with natural
    selection as a mechanism that allows evolution,
    arrived at the hypothesis during a fever induced
    by Malaria
  • Then theres the legend of an apple falling on
    Newtons head

31
Revisiting discovery
  • Wasnt there a logic to Semmelweis reasoning
    and is his reasoning idiosyncratic?
  • Problem ? Consider hypotheses ? Reject those
    incompatible with other things we know ? Devise
    tests of those that survive the first round ?
    Accept or reject on the basis of success or
    failure of predictions ? Revise or abandon
    hypotheses earlier confirmed if new evidence
    warrants it
  • Sometimes, accidents only lead a well prepared
    mind to a hypothesis

32
Popper the logic of falsification
  • There is no principle of induction that will
    justify induction or an inductivist account of
    scientific method/reasoning
  • Like Hempel, Popper emphasizes that there is no
    logic of discovery, but only a logic of
    justification (testing)
  • But, unlike Hempel, Popper argues that the
    important logic involved in justification or
    testing is deductive and, specifically, the logic
    of falsification (Modus Tollens).
  • Re the distinction between psychology and
    epistemology. Heres the deal
  • Popper thinks Hume and others got into trouble by
    focusing on the empirical question of how, in
    fact, people reason rather than on how they
    should.
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