Annotation:Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility
This Page shows all Annotations of the Article Annotationen:The_Logic_of_Scientific_Fallibility.
Annotations
Annotation | AnnotationComment | LastModificationUser | LastModificationDate | Category |
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Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Ai4yfkwcy4 | I would like to submit that it is, indeed, the logic of science and the scientific method that frequently stops scientists from looking outside a specific domain of possibilities. | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 13:52:43 | TextAnnotation Schlussfolgerung3 |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Gt3be2g0dj | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 13:53:23 | TextAnnotation Prämisse3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/M5nkqqbbg1 | Seen in this way, the scientific method does not refer to, nor does it need, the assumption of an “objective” ontological reality—it concerns exclusively the experiential world of observers. | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 14:07:08 | TextAnnotation Schlussfolgerung3 |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/M6tcz38jiv | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 14:07:20 | TextAnnotation Prämisse3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Mmh3lqqo2p | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 13:54:06 | TextAnnotation Prämisse3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Pxdk98ef7e | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 15:02:32 | TextAnnotation Prämisse3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/R60qr14fqa | For many thousands of years the river Nile flooded the Egyptian lowlands near the Mediterranean coast at least once a year. Vast amounts of fresh water seeped into the soil, fertilized it, and created a natural pressure against the water of the sea. The floods were a nuisance and, quite apart from this, using the Nile’s water to irrigate parts of the desert up-stream seemed eminently desirable. So the Assuan Dam was built to solve these two problems. The Nile no longer got out of hand and new land up- stream could be irrigated and cultivated. For a little while the dam seemed a wonderful success of science and engineering. Then it became clear that the salt of the Mediterranean was slowly but steadily seeping into and devastating the lowlands along the coast which had fed Egypt for millennia. | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 13:53:51 | TextAnnotation Beispiel3 |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/S2q82v9tra | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 14:35:02 | TextAnnotation Prämisse3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Ua9u5cntbi | That is to say, one must define certain experiences so that one can recognize them when one experiences them again. There can hardly be regularity before one has noticed repetition. | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 15:02:20 | TextAnnotation Schlussfolgerung3 |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Vxery8f633 | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 13:52:57 | TextAnnotation Beispiel3 | |
Annotationen:The Logic of Scientific Fallibility/Zk2z3wzcac | Hence, the seemingly paradoxical assertion that an observer sees only what he or she already knows. This, in fact, is called “assimilation.” | Sarah Oberbichler | 29 January 2020 14:34:49 | TextAnnotation Schlussfolgerung3 |