I think the notion of ‘cause’ in ‘what causes wave collapse’ is problematical. The wave function is not physical, either, it’s simply a distribution of probabilities. It gives the answer to ‘where is the particle’ prior to it being measured in terms of probabilities. When the measurement is taken, it’s not longer a matter of probabilities but a certainty. That’s the ‘collapse’. — Wayfarer
Science is just superstition and religion glorified with the so called "scientific methods" i.e. hypotheses, experiments and observations. — Corvus
you'd probably not have to pay a dime — Ø implies everything
On the other hand, the monoclastic neutrinal differentiation . . . — alan1000
Inductive logic would simply (possibly incorrectly) guess that it is a duck. — PL Olcott
My old saying is if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck lays
eggs and everything else just like a duck it could be a space
alien perfectly disguised as a duck. — PL Olcott
Gettier cases prove that a reasonable approximation of knowledge
sometimes diverges from actual knowledge — PL Olcott
what is the motivation by which a capitalist society would transform itself into a Democratic Socialist society? — Leontiskos
Does philosophy still contribute? — Pantagruel
. . . gauge whether the philosophy being conducted is any good or not . . . — Tom Storm
Except that this doesn't seem to gauge whether the philosophy being conducted is any good or not, whether it is systematic or not, whether it builds purposefully on established traditions or not, whether it has learned from mistakes or not. — Tom Storm
Professor Derr received a B.A. from Seattle University in 1972 and a Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame in 1976. He has been at Clark since that time. He is a research professor with the George Perkins Marsh Institute and with the programs in Ethics and Public Policy, Environmental Science and Policy(ES&P) and Peace Studies. In 2007, Derr was awarded Clark’s Senior Faculty Fellowship for excellence in teaching and research.
Current Research and Teaching
Derr’s research interests are in the areas of medical ethics and health policy, philosophy of science, and environmental ethics and policy. As a member of the CENTED Hazards Group, he has been involved in interdisciplinary studies of radioactive waste management, occupational hazards, environmental hazard management and hazardous technology transfer.
Much of Derr’s work is directed to the explication and analysis of ethical issues, particularly issues of justice or equity. Derr’s current writing focuses on ethical issues related to the conduct of biomedical research on human subjects in less developed countries, on questions of justice related to national energy policy, and on the application of emerging veterinary reproductive technologies to human beings. Derr teaches the graduate course on Philosophy of Science which may be selected by ES&P M.A. students. Derr has been a mentor to several ES&P graduate students and has served as an advisor for MA theses. Derr is also available for graduate level reading courses on ethical issues.
My advice is to do that. Run free. See what happens. Life is all about picking your adventure. — Hanover
“Apes don’t read PHILOSOPHY!” — Mikie
1. Read a philosophy text and attempt to understand it. — Moliere
Sounds amazing and maybe scary — plaque flag
You are claiming a line through space is and isn't the effect of a cause? — ucarr
I am questioning the notion that philosophy has a distinctiveness that holds throughout its changes. What may be true of one philosopher may not be true of another. — Fooloso4
Odd that you don’t remember the warnings about global warming from back then. Talk about selective memory — Mikie
Likely impeachments will be the new norm for US administrations. You already have the theater of the debt ceiling, hence what could be more useful than have impeachment hearings every then and now? — ssu
For example, one point in space can be represented as being continuous with another — ItIsWhatItIs
I had thought that Descartes’ discovery of algebraic geometry - the idea of dimensional co-ordinates - was of absolutely fundamental importance in the ‘new sciences’ — Quixodian
a more contemporary way of thinking about the real (intra-action that creates material phenomena rather than interaction between pre-existing objects) that has made its way from philosophy into the social sciences. — Joshs
I hope that will satisfy an adolescent's wanderlust. — Vera Mont
Scientific realism seems able to say things like: "fundamental particles don't really exist, they are just mathematical descriptions of standing waves, and it's the mathematical structure that is most real," — Count Timothy von Icarus
But that is precisely what has been called into question by experiments . . . — Quixodian
I think the difficulty here is the red herring of independence of physics and its objects from any particular embodied physicist — plaque flag