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University of Edinburgh School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Dugald Stewart Building on Bristo Square where the school is based.

The University of Edinburgh School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences (PPLS) is a school within the College of Humanities and Social Science at the University of Edinburgh. The School was formed in 2002 as a result of administrative restructuring, when several departments of what was then the Faculty of Arts were brought together. The University of Edinburgh's academic foundation is based on three Colleges containing a total of 22 Schools;[1] among these is the School of Philosophy, Psychology, and Language Sciences (PPLS).

The School is composed of three subject areas:

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  • 1.1. INTROPHIL - What is Philosophy?
  • Perspectives on Language Evolution: interview with Morten Christiansen
  • 1.2. INTROPHIL - Philosophy: Difficult, Important and Everywhere

Transcription

Hi. I'm Dave Ward from the University of Edinburgh, and welcome to the first lecture of our philosophy week. So in this week of the course our job is to try and understand a bit about what philosophy as a subject is. So here's what we're going to do. I'm going to tell you what I think philosophy is. And then I'm going to try and illustrate that conception of philosophy by talking a bit how that relates it to some other subjects. Then, we're going to move on to thinking about how some other features of philosophy follow from that definition of philosophy that I'll have given you. Then were going to move on to thinking about how we actually go about doing philosophy and we're going to do that by looking at our first couple of examples of philosophical arguments. And thinking about how we should understand them and criticize them. And finally we're going to finish by thinking about what it might mean to look for the best way or the right way of thinking about something. And we're going to look at the views of a couple of great philosophers from history who are going to help us think about that question. So let's get started what is philosophy. Well it's a difficult question to answer. And I think the best answer that we can give is a very simple one. Philosophy is just the activity that philosophers get up to. So one important thing about that is that the philosophy isn't just a subject. It's an activity that we have to engage in. Its something that we have to do. And to really get a good sense of what it is to engage in it, what it is to do it, and to do it well, you're going to have to do more than just listen to what I have to say about philosophy this week. The best way to work out what that activity is all about and how to be good at it is going to to be to work your way through the course. And try to engage and think about, and understand all the different topics and problems and arguments that we are going to consider that. So, by doing that, you are hopefully got a much better sense of what philosophy is all about, then I am going to be able to give you this week. But I can atleast try and make a start on saying what I think philosophy is. And here's the definition that I'm going to be working with, with this week. I think that philosophy is the activity of working out the best way to think about things. So what do I mean by that? Well lets clarify it first of all by thinking about how that relates it to some other subjects. So one question you might have immediately about that definition is don't all subjects try to think about things in the right way. Okay from astronomy to zoology everything tries to think about whatever topic or deminics concerned with in the right way. And I think that it's true, but I think that what the philosopher needs to say in response to it, is to distinguish between the activity of getting on with thinking in a particular way. And the activity of stepping back from that way of thinking and working out the right way to think about things. So its that distinction between thinking in a particular way and working out whether some way of thinking is the right way that I think corresponds to the distinction between some particular academic subject. And doing philosophy about that subject. So lets take physics as an example. If you're a physicist you do things like collect data. do measurements. Construct experiments and try and build theories on that basis. Okay. When you're doing that, you're getting on with the activity and the way of thinking that's characteristic of physics. But, we can step back from the activity of doing physics and thinking in that way, that we do, when we're doing physics. And we can ask questions like what is it for data to confirm or refute a theory in physics? What are we doing? We are trying to measure reality. And what does it even mean to try and understand reality in terms of it's basic physical constituents. So, when we step back from the actual process of doing physics in that way, and start asking questions about the ways of thinking, and the ways of carrying on that we're employing when we are doing physics. Then we are making the transition from doing physics to doing the philosophy of physics. Okay we're stepping back and trying to work out the right way of thinking about things. So for our second example I want to think about medicine. Specifically I want to think about the way they would of practiced or thought about medicine in medieval times. So in those times as I understand it, they tried to explain all different diseases and tried to treat all different diseases in terms of what they called four humors. So there was blood, black bile, flame and yellow bile. And if you had anything wrong with you then. They tried to understand that disease in terms of some kind of imbalance of those four humors and treat it accordingly. Now, obviously we don't think about medicine in that way anymore, we don't think that that's the right way to think about diseases and their treatment. So, how can that change in our way of thinking come about? Well, one way it could come about is just by us asking questions about what it really means for a disease to be an imbalance of black bile, and yellow bile, or whatever. So we might just ask ourselves whether we really understand What it means to make that identity clean. That a disease just is that. Or we might look at all the other things in the body that seem to also be important to our physical health and the treatment and curing of disease And think that there seems to be a lot of evidence that they seem important to our health as well so there are things other than blood and bile and phlegm that are important to, to being healthy. How does our medical theory explain that. And we might just notice that our ways of treating diseases and trying to cure people according to this framework Really aren't very successful. Okay. So, different ways in which we might be prompted to revise our conception of what the best way of thinking about diseases and how to treat them are. So notice, from the quick discussion of physics, and that quick discussion of medieval medicine It looks like there are a couple of different ways that we can be prompted to revise our way of thinking about things, revise our conception of what the best way of thinking in a particular domain is. One sort of way can be making that revision from the inside, so Making that revision from just thinking about the subject. So, when I was talking about philosophy of physics, I was talking about asking questions such as, what is it for data to confirm or to refute a theory? And those are questions that can change the way that we think about physics just From the armchair if you will just by thinking about them. In the case of medicine I suggested that one way that we might be prompted to revise our medical framework is by thinking about whether or not we really understand what it means for a disease to be An imbalance of different humors. So again that would be what we might call a challenge to our way of thinking from the inside where we don't have to go out and be confronted by the world to change the way that we're thinking about things in those cases. But another way That we might be prompted to change the way they were thinking about things is from the outside. So this is probably particularly clear with the example of medieval medicine, so presumably one of the reasons why we don't subscribe to that way of thinking about diseases and their treatment any more is because we just noticed that it wasn't very successful, okay? And we try and understand diseases And treat diseases by thinking about them and acting towards them in that they just a lot of people seem to die and and we don't seem to do very well. We might think that we can think about similar examples in physics, so perhaps the sort of discoveries that were made in quantum mechanics at the start of the 20th century Might give us examples here. One way you might think about those discoveries is that, they appear to give us results just by looking at the world and doing experiments on it and observing what we found there. That seem to show that we had to really change, quite fundamentally, some of our notions about how we understand the world. So you might think that some of the results from quantum mechanics put pressure on, basic intuitions that we have about what it is for one thing to be able to cause another. So there might be results in quantum mechanics which suggest that One thing can instantaneously affect another thing that's very far away from it. And that doesn't seem to have any connection to it. There might also be some results from quantum mechanics that suggest that a thing can be like a wave in some respects but like a particle in some other respects. Whereas it seems that according to our common sense conception of reality a thing can be either a wave or a particle but not both. So that's a very quick and crude characterization of some stuff about quantum mechanics. But it's just by way of it example to suggest how the world can throw up. Reasons for us to change our way of thinking about things just a surely as we can get reasons just by thinking about it from our arm chair. And so it's that feature of philosophy, the features that. By taking our ways of thinking about things out into the world and testing them against the world we can be prompted to change and revise them. That means philosophy has this really close relationship with a lot of other subjects. So in our two examples, we've seen how it can have a close relationship with physics, and with medicine. By getting on with the business of doing physics and doing medicine, we can be given reason to step back and think about, or rethink, what we think are our best ways of understanding the world. And this goes for a whole lot of other subjects as well. So for example, in a future week of the course, we're going to be thinking about some issues In the philosophy of mind. And we're going to see how developments in artificial intelligence and computer science led to, people stepping back and trying to think about new ways to think about what actually is to have a mind. So in this section I suggested that philosophy is the activity of stepping back and working out the right way of thinking about things. And I started off by saying that philosophy in important sense was an activity not just a subject. So, so far I've tried to say a little bit about what the activity is, and illustrated it with a couple of examples.

Research

Within the School, research in Psychology is organized along 3 broad themes:

  • Differential Psychology, which looks at individual differences in the way people think, behave, and feel emotions differently.
  • Human Cognitive Neuroscience, which studies memory, attention, executive function, visual memory, sensory integration, and perceptuo-motor control in adults who function normally and those who possess disorders within the nervous system.
  • Language Cognition and Communication, which covers topics in linguistic comprehension, understanding, invention and conversation.[2]

The Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology (CCACE) was a "centre of excellence" to advance research into how ageing affects cognition, and how mental ability in youth affects health and longevity.[3] It was funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC), ESRC, BBSRC and EPSRC through the LLHW MRC's Lifelong Health and Wellbeing scheme, the Centre was led by Ian Deary.

References

  1. ^ "Schools and departments".
  2. ^ "Research: Psychology". University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  3. ^ Cross-council Lifelong Health and Well-being initiative

External links

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This page was last edited on 9 April 2024, at 15:34
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