Philosophy in the trenches: from naturalized to experimental philosophy (of science)
Studies In History and Philosophy of Science Part A, Volume 40, Issue 2, pg 225-226
Karola Stotz
Recent years have seen the development of an approach both to general
philosophy and philosophy of science often referred to as ‘experimental
philosophy’ or just ‘X-Phi’. Philosophers often make or presuppose
empirical claims about how people would react to hypothetical cases,
but their evidence for claims about what ‘we’ would say is usually very
limited indeed. Philosophers of science have largely relied on their
more or less intimate knowledge of their field of study to draw
hypothetical conclusions about the state of scientific concepts and the
nature of conceptual change in science. What they are lacking is some
more objective quantitative data supporting their hypotheses. A growing
number of philosophers (of science), along with a few psychologists and
anthropologists, have tried to remedy this situation by designing
experiments aimed at systematically exploring people’s reactions to
philosophically important thought experiments or scientists’ use of
their scientific concepts. Many of the results have been surprising and
some of the conclusions drawn from them have been more than a bit
provocative. This symposium attempts to provide a window into this new
field of philosophical inquiry and to show how experimental philosophy
provides crucial tools for the philosopher and encourages two-way
interactions between scientists and philosophers.
Read the article.