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Back to Philosophy and the Sciences: Introduction to the Philosophy of Physical Sciences

Learner Reviews & Feedback for Philosophy and the Sciences: Introduction to the Philosophy of Physical Sciences by The University of Edinburgh

4.7
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920 ratings

About the Course

What is the origin of our universe? What are dark matter and dark energy? This is the first part of the course 'Philosophy and the Sciences', dedicated to Philosophy of the Physical Sciences. Scientific research across the physical sciences has raised pressing questions for philosophers. The goal of this course is to introduce you to some of the main areas and topics at the key juncture between philosophy and the physical sciences. Each week we will introduce you to some of these important questions at the forefront of scientific research. We will explain the science behind each topic in a simple, non-technical way, while also addressing the philosophical and conceptual questions arising from it. We’ll consider questions about the origin and evolution of our universe, the nature of dark energy and dark matter and the role of anthropic reasoning in the explanation of our universe. Learning Objectives Gain a fairly well-rounded view on selected areas and topics at the intersection of philosophy and the sciences Understand some key questions, and conceptual problems arising in the natural sciences. Develop critical skills to evaluate and assess these problems. Suggested Reading To accompany 'Philosophy and the Sciences', we are pleased to announce a tie-in book from Routledge entitled 'Philosophy and the Sciences for Everyone'. This course companion to the 'Philosophy and the Sciences' course was written by the Edinburgh Philosophy and the Sciences team expressly with the needs of MOOC students in mind. 'Philosophy and the Sciences for Everyone' contains clear and user-friendly chapters, chapter summaries, glossary, study questions, suggestions for further reading and guides to online resources. Please note, this companion book is optional - all the resources needed to complete the course are available freely and listed on the course site....

Top reviews

NJ

Jun 1, 2021

The course was really fun and enjoyable. The course offered a lot of information in a very simple way. All the instructors were very fluent with their explanation and I thoroughly enjoyed this course!

RB

Jan 28, 2017

Un curso muy completo y fácil de digerir sobre la cosmología y el principio antrópico, muy recomendable para la comprensión que se tiene sobre el universo actualmente y la razón de nuestra existencia.

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201 - 215 of 215 Reviews for Philosophy and the Sciences: Introduction to the Philosophy of Physical Sciences

By D S

Apr 15, 2020

Really enjoyed it!

By Roy H

May 21, 2022

kind of confusing

By Anuj K

Jul 6, 2020

very informative

By Dr.FAKRUDDIN B S

May 4, 2020

Very Good

By Cliff S

Sep 11, 2016

Though familiar with the material, the lectures made several very nice key points about the Philosophy of Science which I found useful. However there are a few issues :

-a lot of the lecturing is on a board which is hard to read

-there is a lot more science than there is Philosophy

The latter isn't necessarily a bad thing, but based on the title I expected more of the latter.

By Saqib R

Dec 4, 2016

Really informative. Equations were a bit difficult to understand. I felt that there was a bias towards anthropic principle.

By Zaher A H

Jan 16, 2017

Very technical and focuses more on cosmology than on the principles of Philosophy of Science

By Rebecca C

Oct 1, 2016

Found it a bit hard to follow, some aspects could've been explained in more detail.

By LAM Y W

Jan 3, 2018

too much mathematics equations and formulas

By zknight078

May 23, 2024

best course

By MD. N M K

Feb 24, 2020

It would be better if you didn't use Cosmology in this course. Because it is hard to grasp and it seems to be more speculative.

By Joy S

Jan 7, 2017

2nd time trying this. Hard to understand subject. Short class.

By Berker B

May 24, 2021

Contains high-school level philosophical trivia and obscure summaries of complex physical theories.

By Araslanova A

May 7, 2018

Waste of Time : supereasy and shallow

By Spritzer L (

Jul 13, 2022

how do iexit of the course🙏