Professor: | William Bechtel |
Office: | HSS 8076 |
Telephone | 822-4461 |
Office Hours | Monday, 10:30-12:15 and by appointment |
Email: | phil12@mechanism.ucsd.edu |
Website: | http://inquiry.ucsd.edu |
Sections | TA | Office | Contact | Office hours |
A01 Tuesday, 8 am | Eric Campbell | HSS 8085 | soupdog@gmail.com | Tuesdays 9:00-10:50 |
A02 Wednesday, 1 pm | Eric Campbell | HSS 8085 | soupdog@gmail.com | Tuesdays 9:00-10:50 |
A03 Wednesday, 4 pm | Eric Martin | HSS 7059 | ecmartin@ucsd.edu | Fridays 11:00-1:00 |
A04 Friday, 10 am | Eric Martin | HSS 7059 | ecmartin@ucsd.edu | Fridays 11:00-1:00 |
Reasoning and decision making are two of the most important activities in wich humans engage. But we don’t always do so is the best manner. When we don’t, the consequences can range from minor inconvenience to catastrophic loss. One of the contexts in which humans have best developed their capacities for good reasoning and decision making is scientific inquiry. Hence, that is where we will turn for guidance. Science is also extremely important to our own decision making as we rely on the results of scientific inquiry. This requires, though, that we understand how science works and be able to assess whether a given result is trustworthy.
Some of the questions we will address are: (1) What makes for a good piece of reasoning in science? (2) Can you ever be absolutely certain of the truth or falsity of a scientific hypothesis? (3) How objective is observation and how can humans avoid making mistakes in perception? (4) What might we learn by systematic observation? (5) What can we learn from discovering correlations between variables and how can we avoid being misled by illusory correlations? (6) What does it take to establish a causal relationship? (7) What are mechanisms, what role do they play in science, and how do scientists discover and reason about them?
This course will emphasize active engagement in the kinds of reasoning and decision making which scientists use in testing hypotheses, especially through on-line exercises and demonstrations. The goals of the course are for students to understand the logical and statistical principles by which scientific claims are created and evaluated and to develop a critical appreciation for the methods by which knowledge is acquired in science. You should leave this course with a better ability to distinguish good from poor reasoning and decision making in science and other domains.
All course materials are on the course website at http://inquiry.ucsd.edu. Login directions and initial login codes are included in the course reader, available at the UCSD bookstore. The modules found on the website include text, animation, and interactive exercises, of which only the text is included in the reader. Some modules have questions to answer at the end. All activity on the site is recorded and logged, including answers to question sets attached to the modules. Completion of the on-line exercises is a requirement of the course.
For each module, students are expected to complete it and any questions attached to it, before attending the class for which it is assigned. Attendance in class and sections is required. Sections will have regular quizzes and pop-quizzes may occasionally be given in lecture. Final grades will be based 30% on the mid-term, 35% on the final exam, 20% on two-short (1- 2 pages) written assignments, 10% for participation and activities (including quizzes) in lecture and sections, and 5% for timely completion of the web-based exercises and questions. For students taking the course pass/fail, a C- (70%) is the minimum grade for receiving a pass.
There are email distribution lists for this course, one for each section. It
is required that you subscribe to the list for your discussions section. Do
it IMMEDIATELY. You can always unsubscribe later if you drop the course or change
sections. The purpose of the list is to allow the TAs and me to distribute information
regarding due dates for assignments, changes of schedule, etc. Some of this
information is crucial, and some of it may be distributed early in the quarter. To subscribe,
you simply need to send an email message to the address corresponding to your
section
Section A01 – sec01-subscribe@mechanism.ucsd.edu
Section A02 – sec02-subscribe@mechanism.ucsd.edu
Section A03 – sec03-subscribe@mechanism.ucsd.edu
Section A04 – sec04-subscribe@mechanism.ucsd.edu
After you send the subscribe request, you will receive a reply from sec0*-request@mechamism.ucsd.edu
(where * is the number of your section) that will ask you to confirm your request.
Follow the directions in this message to confirm you subscription. If you later
want to remove yourself from this list, send email to sec0*-unsubscribe@mechanism.ucsd.edu.
Only the TAs and I have authorization to send mail to this list. There should be no spam. If you receive mail from this list that is not from one of us, be assured that I will as well and will take measures to block further abuse. (The welcome message you receive suggests that you can send email to the list. Sorry, but you cannot.)
Note: This schedule of reading assignments is tentative and subject to revision. Items in italics are modules on the course website. You should complete these, including any attached questions, before the assigned class (although subsequent review is certainly encouraged).
Copies of the powerpoints presented in lecture are available on line. (They may well be revised before being presented, and if so, updates will appear around the time of the relevant class. Click here for access to the lecture notes
January 9: Introduction: The Inquiry Website and Exemplary Scientific Reasoning
January 11: Elements of science: Introduction to Scientific Reasoning, Statements:
the atoms of reasoning; Justification and argument
January 16: Valid arguments: Some basic valid argument forms
January 18: Confirmation, falsification, and fallibility: Evidential relations;
The fallible character of human knowledge
January 23: Observation and categories: Observation and learning to see
January 25: Categorizing phenomena: Categories and taxonomy
January 30: Observational research: Observational research
Febuary 1: Distributions and samples: Variables and measurement
February 6: Midterm
Exam
February 8: Predicting relationships between variables: Predicting relations
between variables
February 13: Predicting from correlations: When variables are correlated
February 15: Differences between means: When variables are not correlated;
When groups differ
February 20: Correlation and causation: Correlational studies as tests
of causal claims; Correlational vs. experimental research
February 22: Causal explanation: Causal explanation
First 1-2 page written assignment due
February 27: Reasoning about and graphing causes: Reasoning about causation;
Causal reasoning with directed graphs
March 1: Causality and experiments: Testing causal claims experimentally
March 6: Causation when experiments are not possible: When randomized experiments
are not possible
March 8: Mechanism and mechanistic explanation: Entities and activities
organized to produce a phenomenon
Second 1-2 page written assignment due
March 13: Organization and levels of organization: Levels of organization
within mechanisms; Describing and portraying mechanisms
March 15: Discovering and modeling mechanisms: Experimenting on mechanisms;
Denying phenomena when mechanisms cannot be conceived; Modeling strategies
Final Exam: Thursday, March 22, 11:30-2:30