There is an asymmetry in the procedures used by natural scientists to account for `correct belief' and for `error'. Correct belief is treated as the normal state of affairs, as deriving unproblematically from experimental evidence, and as requiring no special explanation. Errors are seen as something to be explained away, as due to the intrusion of non-scientific influences. An elaborate repertoire of interpretative resources is employed in accounting for error. Asymmetrical accounting for error and for correct belief is a social device which reinforces the traditional conception of scientific rationality and which makes the community of scientists appear as the kind of community we, and they, recognize as scientific
Some people stick to beliefs that do not align with scientific consensus when faced with science com...
Theoretical arguments and empirical investigations indicate that a high proportion of published find...
Assessment of error and uncertainty is a vital component of both natural and social science. Empiric...
Fallibility in science cuts both ways: it poses dilemmas for the scientist who discovers errors in t...
Kevin Elliott and others separate two common arguments for the legitimacy of societal values in scie...
No question's solved until error's resolved. —Prospective proverb 1. Introduction. How do ...
Can science correct its mistakes? Philosophers and scientists alike assume “the self-corrective thes...
Error is the lack of ability in explaining empirical phenomena. It can be classified in many ways,de...
Scientific communities enjoy nearly unchallenged authority on matters related to the natural world; ...
AbstractUnlike the usual research paper where answers to specific questions are sketched, the aim of...
Error is a common part of scientific practice, which must be accounted for by scientonomy. A scienti...
Abstract: The process of error recognition is explored first in statistics, and then in science. The...
Thinking scientifically consists of systematic observation, experiment, measurement, testing and mod...
With the explosion of scientific data and paper preprints, scientists and media find it hard to navi...
Some people stick to beliefs that do not align with scientific consensus when faced with science com...
Some people stick to beliefs that do not align with scientific consensus when faced with science com...
Theoretical arguments and empirical investigations indicate that a high proportion of published find...
Assessment of error and uncertainty is a vital component of both natural and social science. Empiric...
Fallibility in science cuts both ways: it poses dilemmas for the scientist who discovers errors in t...
Kevin Elliott and others separate two common arguments for the legitimacy of societal values in scie...
No question's solved until error's resolved. —Prospective proverb 1. Introduction. How do ...
Can science correct its mistakes? Philosophers and scientists alike assume “the self-corrective thes...
Error is the lack of ability in explaining empirical phenomena. It can be classified in many ways,de...
Scientific communities enjoy nearly unchallenged authority on matters related to the natural world; ...
AbstractUnlike the usual research paper where answers to specific questions are sketched, the aim of...
Error is a common part of scientific practice, which must be accounted for by scientonomy. A scienti...
Abstract: The process of error recognition is explored first in statistics, and then in science. The...
Thinking scientifically consists of systematic observation, experiment, measurement, testing and mod...
With the explosion of scientific data and paper preprints, scientists and media find it hard to navi...
Some people stick to beliefs that do not align with scientific consensus when faced with science com...
Some people stick to beliefs that do not align with scientific consensus when faced with science com...
Theoretical arguments and empirical investigations indicate that a high proportion of published find...
Assessment of error and uncertainty is a vital component of both natural and social science. Empiric...