Course
PhD course in Philosophy of Science (DUH602)
Dette er emnebeskrivelsen for studieåret 2025-2026
Fakta
Emnekode
DUH602
Vekting (stp)
7
Semester undervisningsstart
Spring
Undervisningsspråk
English
Antall semestre
1
Vurderingssemester
Spring
Content
The course will give a broad orientation on central issues in the philosophy of science related to the social sciences and the humanities (‘the human sciences’).
The main topics are:
- Objectivity and the role of values in the human sciences.
- Scientific confirmation.
- Feministic perspectives on science.
- Social ontology and constructivism.
- Scientific explanation.
- Individualism versus holism.
- Fundamental questions related to qualitative and quantitative methodology.
Learning outcome
Knowledge:
The student will gain knowledge of fundamental philosophical issues related to the social sciences and the humanities.
Skills
By the end of the course, the student will be able to:
- Facilitate critical reflection and argumentation upon presuppositions that may easily be taken for granted in their own research tradition, or in science as a whole.
- Relate discipline-specific topics to general reflections and concepts of philosophy of science
General competence
By the end of the course, the student will be able to demonstrate competence in analytical discussion and well-structured academic argumentation.
Forkunnskapskrav
Exam
Form of assessment | Weight | Duration | Marks | Aid |
---|---|---|---|---|
Individual paper | 1/1 | Passed / Not Passed |
- Evaluation will be based on one individual paper (4000 words (+/- 10%) on a self-chosen topic approved by the instructor.
- The paper must be written in English or in a Scandinavian language.
- The paper must be submitted within six weeks after the topic has been approved.
Vilkår for å gå opp til eksamen/vurdering
Fagperson(er)
Course teacher:
Marianne Hafnor BøeCourse coordinator:
Ståle GundersenCourse teacher:
Ulrich DettweilerStudy Program Director:
Hein BerdinesenCourse teacher:
Hein BerdinesenMethod of work
The course will be given in the form of five full-day lectures\seminars. A detailed timetable will be made available at the beginning of the course-semester
Active participation in lectures and seminars