The Philosophy of Science — Season 1, Episode 8: Unanswered Questions
Documentary, Talk • 66 min • 1 season, 8 episodes
Episode synopsis
In our eighth and final lecture, we investigate four key areas where scientific advances have generated profound philosophical questions. We delve into cosmology and the Big Bang theory's impact on questions of existence, the biological distinction between life and non-life, neuroscience's relationship to consciousness and the mind-brain problem, and the philosophical puzzles arising from quantum mechanics. Dr. Orr demonstrates that scientific progress doesn’t replace philosophy—it deepens it, revealing that the more we discover, the more mysterious the world becomes and the more we need philosophical analysis to make sense of it.
About The Philosophy of Science
In The Philosophy of Science, an eight-hour course, Dr. James Orr traces the development of science from ancient Greece through the Scientific Revolution to today. He examines how theological, institutional, and philosophical forces shaped science, while tackling key issues like the demarcation problem of science versus pseudoscience, Hume’s problem of induction, Kuhn’s theory of paradigm shifts, and the realism debate. The course also engages fascinating unresolved questions raised by cosmology, neuroscience, and quantum mechanics, ultimately arguing that scientific progress does not eliminate philosophical inquiry but rather deepens it, revealing new mysteries that demand philosophical analysis.