Response to Karl Popper’s The Logic of Scientific Discovery
How the Reading Has Affected What I Believe about the Nature of Science and What It Can Tell Us about the World
Popper (2005) rejects the notion that inductive reasoning can lead to the identification of universals, and he uses the white swan as an example: “no matter how many instances of white swans we may have observed, this does not justify the conclusion that all swans are white” (p. 4)—no, and nor should it. However, one could legitimately analyze the swan still further, identify its species and thus conclude that this species of swan is always going to be white. White is one of the characteristics of this type of swan—so why should it not be viewed as a universal characteristic of this specific species? Popper’s approach to the nature of science is rooted in the empirical analysis—in deduction rather than induction. He thus concludes that “like every other form of inductive logic, the logic of probable inference, or ‘probability logic’, leads either to an infinite regress, or to the doctrine of apriorism” (p. 6).
What would Popper make of today’s world’s use of probability logic? Why, the financial markets are driven by probability logic; the political strategizing of today is driven by probability logic; business is driven by probability logic—what in the world is not driven by it? Popper appears to approach metaphysics in the same manner as Ayer (1990), though Popper’s emphasis on the logic of the statement serving as the basis of all knowledge rather than on sense data ala Ayer is one difference between them. For me, I believe the inductive reasoning is just as important as deductive and I find Popper’s arguments unpersuasive. A great deal of scientific inquiry, I feel, is driven by inductive reasoning and always has been. I believe that this is Kuhn’ (1972) main point at least: after all, he states that science, ultimately, is “research firmly based upon one or more past scientific achievements, achievements that some particular scientific community acknowledges for a time as supplying the foundation for its further practice” (p.10). For science to be meaningful, some induction is required.
Questions Regarding the Nature of the Nature of Facts, Theories, and the Scientific Enterprise
Popper discusses the knowledge of facts from the standpoint of sensationalism, which is where Ayer (1990) ultimately lays his basis of epistemology. Popper on the other hand rejects this notion and insists that the knowledge is conveyed by way of relation—i.e., by the statement, or the logical communication of relations. Sense perception is only a piece of a puzzle that remains to be put together and to rely on sensationalism as a means of understanding...
The differences between the empirical inductivist approach to science and the Popperian one are immense. Based on induction, the former approach is thesis to Popper's antithesis. The Popperian approach is a response to and a rejection of the value of induction in the scientific process. This rejection pits these two approaches against one another. In the end, while the empirical inductivist approach does have some value and has a long
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