impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

Creating theory: Encouragement for using creativity and deduction in qualitative nursing research by Elisabeth Bergdahl RN, Carina M. Berterö https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/nup.12421

"Quine also points....Creating a good hypothesis is an imaginative art, not a science"

Blockers of creativity in scientific research process 👇🏾

One could also view the dogma always working within a ‘conceptual framework’ or existing nursing theory as a creativity blocker. Taking the view that grand theories or conceptual frameworks should govern nursing science and research as done by, for example, Fawcett and Gigliotti (2001), Masters (2014), and Meleis (2007) is, in our view, a fundamental mistake. Forcing researchers to follow ideas that, in many cases, are not even scientific can become a serious ‘blocker’ for creativity (Adams, 2001; Davis, 2011). Of course, our beliefs affect how we do science, but that should encourage us to test and question our beliefs, not letting them govern our scientific thinking. Dahlberg et al. (2008), Fawcett and Gigliotti (2001), and Hoeck and Delmar (2018) are among those authors that have the notion that suggests that all research needs to be aligned with some philosophical system. This uncritical stance can become a serious problem if the philosophical theory becomes a dogmatic system that is not open to criticism. Accepting that researcher should not question some theoretical assumption is against the crucial scientific principle of being critical and realising that all statements, beliefs, and assumptions are open to revision (Feyerabend, 2010; Popper, 2002b; Quine, 1953; Yous et al., 2020).
There is also reason to question the effort for consensus sometimes mentioned as a scientific ideal by, among others, Bishop (1998) and Morse (2017b); which could be a discussion blocker. As Feyerabend (1999) says, we should sometimes be anarchistic and suggest different ways of thinking to provoke a creative debate; striving for consensus is, in many regards, a creativity blocker. Instead, we should encourage creative scholarly debate, questioning, discussing, and critically testing existing ideas, not letting existing theory limit further research by striving for consensus. Philosophers and scientists should aim for evidence that encourages further inquiry and discussion rather than consensus and evidence that stops it (Hintikka, 1970). Finding empirical evidence that falsifies a theory is a huge leap forward. We then know what does not work and develop and evolve theories further.

impactology, (edited ) to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

Scientific Models in Philosophy of Science By Daniela M. Bailer-Jones

https://upittpress.org/books/9780822962731/

Body of Knowledge for Modeling and Simulation A Handbook by the Society for Modeling and Simulation International Edited by Tuncer Ören, Bernard P. Zeigler, Andreas Tolk

https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-11085-6

impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

I'm looking for a department program that is at the intersection of philosophy of science, philosophy of education, philosophy of mind and graphic design

Has anyone come across something like that?

Wilhelm_Grafe, to philosophie
@Wilhelm_Grafe@fediphilosophy.org avatar

@philosophy
@philosophie
#PhilosophyOfScience
#ModusTollens

what a nice, profound and inspiring take of Popper's beard - by Harold I. Smith

https://www.academia.edu/119244125/A_Lesson_from_Swans

impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

Learning through the Scientific Imagination by Fiora Salis

https://philarchive.org/archive/SALLTT-3

Imagination in scientific modeling by Adam Toon

https://philarchive.org/archive/TOOIIS

#philosophyofimagination #philosophyofscience

impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

Everyday Scientific Imagination : A Qualitative Study of the Uses, Norms, and Pedagogy of Imagination in Science by Michael T. Stuart

https://michaeltstuart.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Stuart-M-2019-Everyday-Scientific-Imagination.pdf

#philosophyofscience

impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar
impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar
impactology, to random
@impactology@mastodon.social avatar

Creating Scientific Concepts By Nancy J. Nersessian

"An account that analyzes dynamic reasoning processes implicated in a fundamental problem of creativity in science: how does genuine novelty emerge from existing representations?"

#philosophyofscience

https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262515078/creating-scientific-concepts/

ttpphd, to philosophy
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

Some Narrative Conventions of Scientific Discourse
Rom Harré, 1990

"The academic ‘we’ might seem at first glance to be just a version of the editorial ‘we’. Like the latter it is mutedly egocentric but it is not mainly used to imply teamwork. Rather, it is used to draw the listener into complicity, to participate as something more than an audience. "

https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780203981115-14/narrative-conventions-scientific-discourse-rom-harr%C3%A9

This is my new favorite thing.

ttpphd, to science
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

Critical Realism: A Critical Evaluation
Tong Zhang, Social Epistemology 2022

"positivism provides the scientists with the excuse to focus on formulating and revising auxiliary theories and omit the discussion of core theories, thereby leading to the establishment of dogmatic metaphysics."

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02691728.2022.2080127

ttpphd, to science
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

Navigating Publishing Critical Health Communication Research
Hudak, Front. Commun., 2020

"while interpretive and critical scholars are trained to read and analyze social scientific research, the inverse is not true. Post-positivists then review critical research without knowing the basic principles of that world view."

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2020.00038/full

jimdonegan, to mathematics
@jimdonegan@mastodon.scot avatar
selfawarepatterns.com, to fantasy
@selfawarepatterns.com@selfawarepatterns.com avatar

What is the difference between magic and science?

It’s been a while since I shared an Existential Comic. This one gets at a question we’ve discussed before, although it’s been several years. What exactly is the distinction between the physical and non-physical, in this case between science and magic?

https://existentialcomics.com/comic/537Credit: https://existentialcomics.com/comic/537Corey Mohler, the author, has a short write-up under the comic at his site, citing Arthur C. Clarke’s third law: “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,” and J.R.R. Tolkien having his elves not understand what the hobbits mean when they ask to see elven magic. All the elves have are knowledge and capabilities, some of which seem like “magic” to mortals. (This isn’t always true in Tolkien’s mythology. Divine beings, for instance, have capabilities no one else can attain. But Tolkien mostly implies it’s just more of nature rather than anything distinct.)

Which brings us back to the question, what exactly is magic, the supernatural, or the non-physical? For that matter, what is the physical? The answer I’ve reached before, is the physical is anything that interacts with other physical things and evolves according to rules, rules we can hope to discover, at least to some degree. When we encounter something that doesn’t follow the rules as we understand them, historically we don’t assume we’ve found anything magical. We take it as something for which we just don’t know the rules yet.

Even in cases where we fail to understand the rules for a long time, we tend to just figure out what we can about it, and “black box” the rest. Isaac Newton had to do it with gravity, early modern biologists with the “spirit” that seemed to animate nerves, Charles Darwin with inheritance, and particle physicists today do it with quantum measurement.

Fantasy stories, like Harry Potter, usually present magic as something obviously distinct. But it’s telling that one of the things any fantasy author has to consider is what the “rules of magic” are for their fictional world. Just because it’s fantasy doesn’t mean anything goes, at least not in quality stories that avoid cheating with deus ex machina type events. In that sense, the challenge is similar to the rules of fictional science that sci-fi authors have to work out in their worlds.

Orson Scott Card once said that the real difference between the fantasy genre and science fiction is that one tends to have swords, wizards, and supernatural monsters in it, while the other machines, spaceships, and hi-tech monsters. (Since then, the borders have gotten blurrier, with both genres expanding into each other.)

All of which seems to indicate that magic, as commonly intuited, is just old notions of how the world works, albeit in a caricatured and romanticized form in contemporary fiction. In that sense, science is the successor, the new magic that’s taken us far beyond what the old variety was able to achieve.

Unless of course I’m missing something?

https://selfawarepatterns.com/2024/02/13/existential-comics-the-philosophy-of-magic/

#Fantasy #Philosophy #PhilosophyOfScience #Science #ScienceFiction

PUH_ther, to linguistics

"Conspiracy Theory", do you use this term loosely in everyday discourse? Like, "Spinach is very healthy, that's just a Conspiracy Theory..."

If so, can you give examples?
...
Or do you rather use it only for CTs in a narrow sense like 9/11.

@academicchatter #linguistics #linguistik #philosophy #philosophie #philosophyofscience #bullshit #conspiracytheories

dlevenstein, to Neuroscience
@dlevenstein@neuromatch.social avatar

A #preprint (#tootprint?, whatever), on how the theories we build depend on the problems we use them to solve.

#pragmatism #philosophyofscience #neuroscience
#cognitivescience

https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/q6n58

dlevenstein, to random
@dlevenstein@neuromatch.social avatar

Finally got a copy of Hasok Chang’s new “Realism for Realistic People”. 🌡️💧🔋

Starting off with a defense of #pragmatism and a modest goal: #philosophyofscience we can use to understand and inform actual scientific practice.

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gntert, to physics German

Hey @histodons and @physics, what's a good book about the #manhattanproject that gives me a brief overview? Preferably in English or German. I recently read some historical books about early twentieth century #physics and the #viennacircle of the #philosophyofscience which kind of lead me to this topic.

yoginho, to Israel
@yoginho@spore.social avatar

I am utterly saddened that I won't be able to travel to Haifa tonight to teach the students of the Technion #PhilosophyOfScience.

My flight was canceled due to the horrific events unfolding in #Israel & #Gaza at the moment.

In my book, randomly & systematically murdering civilians is NOT fighting for freedom, no matter how oppressed you are. It's terrorism. I'm utterly disgusted by those who don't seem to understand that.

So much hate and senseless violence. It makes me speechless.

ttpphd, to science
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

The blind spot of science is the neglect of lived experience | Aeon Essays

https://aeon.co/essays/the-blind-spot-of-science-is-the-neglect-of-lived-experience

"scientific ‘objectivity’ can’t stand outside experience; in this context, ‘objective’ simply means something that’s true to the observations agreed upon by a community of investigators using certain tools. Science is essentially a highly refined form of human experience, based on our capacities to observe, act and communicate."

#Metascience #PhilosophyOfScience #Science

jimdonegan, to world
@jimdonegan@mastodon.scot avatar
jimdonegan, to physics
@jimdonegan@mastodon.scot avatar
MarkRubin, to stsing
@MarkRubin@fediscience.org avatar

New article from me:

“The replication crisis is less of a ‘crisis’ in the Lakatosian approach than it is in the Popperian and naïve methodological falsificationism approaches”

Substack: https://markrubin.substack.com/p/popper-lakatos-and-the-replication-crisis

Preprint: https://doi.org/10.31222/osf.io/2dz9s







@stsing


@philosophyofscience

jesparent, to philosophy

#Foucault and .... neurodiversity, medical, institutions, history, and more

The "Medical Gaze" fits quite a lot with reductionism broadly, and many lingering issues in fragmented views of human experience, of being a person.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BBJTeNTZtGU&ab_channel=TheSchoolofLife #philosophy #history #historyofscience #philosophyofscience

mnrajah, to random

Reading Meghan O’Gieblyn’s “God Human Animal Machine” and couldn’t help bursting out laughing at this line 😂 #philosophyofscience

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