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In the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy.
Friedel Weinert (Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Bradford)
33 episodes
2 days ago
These podcasts are devoted to selected topics in Political Philosophy, and the History and Philosophy of the Natural and Social Sciences. In the Introduction I explain that my starting point is philosophical problems, rather than, say, the history of great thinkers. Each episode of Political Philosophy deals one topical issue: The issue of Power; the notion of (Republican) Liberty and the problem of Social Justice and the contrast between Open and Closed Societies Episodes in History and Philosophy of science will deal with the notion of time, scientific revolutions and the nature of science.
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Philosophy
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All content for In the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy. is the property of Friedel Weinert (Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Bradford) and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
These podcasts are devoted to selected topics in Political Philosophy, and the History and Philosophy of the Natural and Social Sciences. In the Introduction I explain that my starting point is philosophical problems, rather than, say, the history of great thinkers. Each episode of Political Philosophy deals one topical issue: The issue of Power; the notion of (Republican) Liberty and the problem of Social Justice and the contrast between Open and Closed Societies Episodes in History and Philosophy of science will deal with the notion of time, scientific revolutions and the nature of science.
Show more...
Philosophy
Society & Culture
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Episode 23: Popper's Critical Rationalism
In the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy.
33 minutes 15 seconds
6 months ago
Episode 23: Popper's Critical Rationalism

Popper's Critical Rationalism consists of two parts: 1) a critical attitude towards science; 2) a critical attitude towards politics. The critical attitude towards science meant that he regarded all scientific knowledge as fallible. No certainty exists in science. All scientific theories are subject to severe tests and are constantly facing the evidence. This is his famous method of falsifiability: all scientific knowledge is fallible. When he applies to it politics, it turns into the fallibility of political leaders and their ideas. It becomes his plea for an open society, in which the rule of law guarantees that political ideas and programmes are subject to rigorous scrutiny to prevent political leaders from doing too much harm. In an open society, the individual enjoys inalienable rights.

Literature:

Popper, K.: Conjectures and Refutations (1963)

Popper, K.: Objective Knowledge (1972)

Popper, K.: The Open Society and Its Enemies (2 volumes, 1966)

Popper, K.: Unended Quest - An Intellectual Biography (1976)

Weinert, F.: Karl Popper - Professional Philosopher and Public Intellectual (2022)


In the Beginning, there was ... Philosophy.
These podcasts are devoted to selected topics in Political Philosophy, and the History and Philosophy of the Natural and Social Sciences. In the Introduction I explain that my starting point is philosophical problems, rather than, say, the history of great thinkers. Each episode of Political Philosophy deals one topical issue: The issue of Power; the notion of (Republican) Liberty and the problem of Social Justice and the contrast between Open and Closed Societies Episodes in History and Philosophy of science will deal with the notion of time, scientific revolutions and the nature of science.