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The Character of Galilean Evidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 January 2023

Joseph C. Pitt*
Affiliation:
Virginia Polytechnic Instituteand State University

Extract

Concerning evidence there are two important questions: (1) what is going to count as evidence? and (2) what are the appropriate means for employing evidence? These two problems pervade the analysis of the scientific process. They are with us as much today as in Galileo’s time. For example, with respect to contemporary arguments between Evolutionists and Scientific Creationists, if the issue is taken in its cognitive rather than its political dimension, the entire discussion turns on the criteria for acceptable, evidence, i.e, the heart of the problem is disagreement over the status of the data one wants to invoke as evidence.

Many of the disputes between Galileo and his philosophical, interlocutors in his Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems turn on some of the same issues that bedevil the debate between evolutionists and creationists, i.e., what is going to count as evidence?

Type
Part II. History and Philosophy of Science
Copyright
Copyright © Philosophy of Science Association 1986

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References

Ariew, Roger. (Forthcoming). “The Phases of Venus before 1610.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science.Google Scholar
Galileo, G. (1632). Dialogo di masslmi Sistemi del Mondo. Florence: G.B. Landini. (As reprinted as Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems , (trans.) Stillman Drake. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967.)Google Scholar
Laudan, Larry. (1984). Science and Values. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar