Philosophy of science
From CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science
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Philosophy of science are the principles and ideas by which scientific activity and ideas operate.
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Purpose of philosophy of science
Philosophy of science serves the following purposes:
- Determining a definition of science to determine which realms of ideas are accessible to science, and which are "only religion" or "only philosophy;"
- Developing criteria for determining which ideas are science, which are speculation, and which are false;
- Developing methods for experimentation and observation to advance science;
Issues in philosophy of science
Issues include:
- Science: Understanding what science is generally, the different types of science, and how we arrive at "scientific truth;"
- Science and the Supernatural: Defining "science," and "supernatural," and determining a proper relationship for the two;
- Paradigmatic Schematic: Understanding axioms, theories, paradigms, and the interaction of the three;
- Falsifiability: A criterion for determining what is "science" and what is not.
- Metaphysical paradigms: Various views on the nature of the universe, and the effect those philosophical views have on philosophy of science;
- Teleology and Philosophical naturalism: Opposing philosophical positions on the existence of design and purpose in nature. Teleology asserts that there is purpose and design in nature; philosophical naturalism asserts that there is none.
- God of the gaps: The argument that creationism is invalid because it just puts "God" in the gaps of science.
- Religious empiricism: the belief that evidence, science, and logic lead to belief in the God of Abraham;
Related References
- Philosophy of Science by Galilean Library
- Darwin's Failed Predictions, Slide 6: "Darwinism: grounded in science or propped up by philosophy?" (from JudgingPBS.com) by Casey Luskin
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See Also
Categories: Stub | Science | Philosophy

