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L**X
Great for my purpose
This book was recommended as essential reading to accompany The Teaching Company's course "Philosophy of Science". It covered many of the issues presented in the course. The book is an introduction to the current issues. The arguments are well thought out and presented clearly. It appears that there is no 'Look inside' feature so here is a peak at the high level contents1. Science and Pseudoscience2. Rationality, Objectivity, and Values in Science3. The Duhem-Quine thesis and Underdetermination4. Induction, Prediction, and Evidence5. Confirmation and Relevance: Bayesian Approaches6. Models of Explanation7. Laws of Nature8. Intertheoretic Reduction9. Empiricism and Scientific RealismI should also add that the book has an introduction and to each of the above sections. Each section is followed by a commentary of each article therein. Finally, the book has a glossary, name index, and subject index.
J**E
Good book
Great anthology and survey of significant works in the field of Phil of Sci. This book has inspired me to look into Thomas Kuhn's contributions to the field. Kuhn is a sloppy writer and easy to critique [as this book shows], however, he has some 'revolutionary' ideas [no pun intended] as to the nature of paradigm shift in the scientific community. The book gives bits of other great works from such people as Hemple, Laudan, and even Popper. Highly recommended if you are looking for a survey of works in the field of Philosophy of Science.
W**M
As advertised.
Bought as a textbook for my son. As advertised, great condition and the price was right.
J**H
The book itself is good - the reading material that is
Actually, I didn't get this book via Amazon....I ordered, but it turned out that the book had been sold already, so I was able to get it at another online site. The book itself is good - the reading material that is, but the paper this book is printed on is CRAP. It is very thin and you can see the text on the backside through on the front side. UGH! hard to read. Wish it came in hardback.
J**Z
Philosophy of science textbook was great; the class not so much
Great rental; interesting book! Took a class that used this as its textbook. I am a chemistry major and thought philosophy of science (an option for a general education class under the critical thinking requirements for graduation) would be an interesting option. If you consider yourself science oriented, this class will challenge your beliefs. Book is worded towards philosophy majors or people that have already attained their degrees.
B**N
Great introduction to a grand subject
Used this book for an undergraduate philosophy of science course. The volume contains a large number of extremely seminal papers with an accessibility that ranges from the relatively easy (e.g. Hempel's D-N model) to more difficult works (e.g. Quine's Two Dogmas). As a collection of historically relevant philosophy of science papers, you certainly cannot go wrong with this choice.
E**N
The book it's self is in good condition, however the writing is unnecessarily difficult to ...
This book puts me to sleep. The book it's self is in good condition, however the writing is unnecessarily difficult to read.
J**A
Should be hardcover!
There are more essays in here than we could fit into one semester, and each one can serve as a month's lesson. It's held up pretty well for the amount of use and abuse I've put into it, but it would be better if it was a hardcover. Even if you're not taking a PH class and you're just curious about the underlying philosophy of the scientific method then this book is for you.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 month ago