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Seminar paper from the year 2013 in the subject Philosophy - Philosophy of the 20th century, grade: 1.0, University of Vienna (Institut für Philosophie), course: Seminar Pluralismus und Wissenschaftsphilosophie, language: English, abstract: In his recent book, Is Water H2O?, Hasok Chang presents a detailed analysis of scientificrealism and enunciates a new concept of it, which he names "active scientific realism". It is aview of scientific realism that accentuates experimental activity for learning about realityrather than armchair philosophy in the search for utmost metaphysical truth. Chang…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Seminar paper from the year 2013 in the subject Philosophy - Philosophy of the 20th century, grade: 1.0, University of Vienna (Institut für Philosophie), course: Seminar Pluralismus und Wissenschaftsphilosophie, language: English, abstract: In his recent book, Is Water H2O?, Hasok Chang presents a detailed analysis of scientificrealism and enunciates a new concept of it, which he names "active scientific realism". It is aview of scientific realism that accentuates experimental activity for learning about realityrather than armchair philosophy in the search for utmost metaphysical truth. Chang puts itin a nutshell as follows: "If the buzzword for standard realism is truth, it is progress for activerealism." (Chang 2012, 223)This term paper attempts to critically look at this new concept, put it in the perspective ofother realist concepts and find answers to questions like the following:- How does Chang's concept fit into the existing landscape of scientific realism?- What are the roots of the concept?- What is new and attractive in it?- What are the weaknesses of the concept?First I'll try to define scientific realism as a metaphysical and epistemological position asopposed to anti-realism. In the next chapter I'll present the main arguments for and againstscientific realism, the "no miracle" argument and the "pessimistic meta induction", and alsolook at them from Hasok Chang's angle of view.Then a brief overview of common realist positions in philosophy of science will be given,including Hasok Chang's new conception. In the following chapter I'll try to look critically atsome aspects of Chang's "Active Scientific Realism" and balance the strengths andweaknesses of the concept.
Autorenporträt
Karl-Heinz Mayer hat eine Karriere in der High-Tech Industrie in Österreich und Dänemark hinter sich. Im Ruhestand besann er sich auf seine Vorliebe für Philosophie und begann ein Studium dieser. Nach Abschluss des Bachelor- und des Master-Studiums ist er zur Zeit im Doktoratsstudium an der Universität Wien. Er konzentriert sich auf die kontemporäre Philosophie.