The Rise of Empiricism

6 - 7 September, 2010 
Darlington Centre, 
Institute Building boardroom, University of Sydney

Empiricism is often regarded as the characterising feature of modern
scientific method, and, in those approaches to psychology and the social
and economic sciences that seek to model themselves on successful
scientific practice in the physical and life sciences, it often acts as
a model of good practice. Yet what is advocated is a very simplified
model in which a rarefied notion of method as value-free inquiry is
presented as the essence of empiricism. The failings of such a
conception have long been evident, but the motivations behind the
various forms of empiricism have remained obscure. The conference will
explore new avenues to the original form of empiricism and show how it
was able to directly engage questions of value in a novel and revealing
way, and how its connection with 'hard' sciences was not merely to
provide a methodological gloss on these, but went to the core of what
scientific explanation consisted in.


Speakers


*       Peter Anstey (Otago University)
*       Millicent Churcher (Sydney University)
*       Stephen Gaukroger (Sydney University)
*       Peter Kail (Oxford University)
*       David Macarthur (Sydney University)
*       Liam Semler (Sydney University)
*       Dejan Simkovic (Sydney University)
*       Alberto Vanzo (Otago University)
*       Anik Waldow (Sydney University)
*       Charles Wolfe (Sydney University)

Contact:

 

Dr. Anik Waldow

Lecturer

Department of Philosophy, SOPHI

University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia

Telephone: +61 2 91141245

Fax: +61 2 9351 3918

Email: [email protected]

 

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