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Great Issues in Science
HSP 124H CRN 8408
9:10am – 10:00am
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
Observatory
Daniel Steffenson
The course has six sections:
I. The Discovery
of Science--The Model of the Greeks
II. The Nature and Practice of
Science--Introduction to Models of Justification
III . The Nature and Practice of Science--Philosophical
Analysis
IV. Women and Science--Are New Models Needed?
V. Science and Literature
VI. Science and Values--Limitations of the Models
There are five papers assigned of 5-6 pages (two are
combined into one 10 page paper) plus 3 or 4 short assignments.
There is a final project: a field trip to Borders in Ann Arbor where
each student selects a book from the science section (paid for by the
Honors Institute). Each student presents a 20 minute oral report on his
or her chosen book at the end of the semester in lieu of a final.
Reading List: (Some books on this list may change)
Andromeda Strain, Michael Crichton, Ballantine,1969.
Longitude, Dava Sobel, Penguin Books, 1995.
Great Scientific Experiments: 20 Experiments, that Changed Our View of
the World, Rom Harré, Oxford,1981.
Lucretius: The Nature of Things, F.O. Copley, translator, W.W. Norton,
1977.
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 2nd Ed., Thomas Kuhn, Chicago,
1970.
Galileo, Bertolt Brecht (Charles Laughton trans.), Grove Press, 1966.
Cat's Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Dell, 1963.
The Panda's Thumb, Stephen J. Gould, Norton, 1980.
Course Pack of Selected Readings (provided in class).
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