Science, Truth, and Democracy
Kitcher, Philip,
Professor of Philosophy,
Columbia University
Print publication date: 2001
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-514583-0 doi:10.1093/0195145836.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
What should be the goal of science in a democratic society? Some say, to attain the truth; others deny the possibility (or even the intelligibility) of truth-seeking. Science, Truth, and Democracy attempts to provide a different answer. It is possible to make sense of the notion of truth, and to understand truth as correspondence to a mind-independent world. Yet science could not hope to find the whole truth about that world. Scientific inquiry must necessarily be selective, focusing on the aspects of nature that are deemed most important. Yet how should that judgement be made? The book's answer is that the search for truth should be combined with a respect for democracy. The scientific research that should strike us as significant would address the questions singled out as most important in an informed deliberation among parties committed to each others’ well-being. The book develops this perspective as an ideal of ‘well-ordered science’, relating this ideal both to past efforts at science policy and to the possibility that finding the truth may not always be what we want. It concludes with a chapter on the responsibilities of scientists.
Keywords: democracy, philosophy of science, scientific inquiry, scientific responsibility, scientific truth Table of Contents
Introduction
One.
Unacceptable Images
Two.
The World as We Find It
Three.
The Ideal of Objectivity
Four.
The World as We Make It
Five.
Mapping Reality
Six.
Scientific Significance
Seven.
The Myth of Purity
Eight.
Constraints on Free Inquiry
Nine.
Organizing Inquiry
Ten.
Well-Ordered Science
Eleven.
Elitism, Democracy, and Science Policy
Twelve.
Subversive Truth and Ideals of Progress
Thirteen.
The Luddites' Laments
Fourteen.
Research in an Imperfect World
Index
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