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Special Topic
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Statistical Science and Philosophy of Science: Where Do (Should) They Meet in 2011 and Beyond? |
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Guest Editors: Deborah G. Mayo, Aris Spanos and Kent W. Staley
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Statistical Science Meets Philosophy of Science: The Two-Way Street
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At one level of analysis, statisticians and philosophers of science ask many of the same questions: What should be observed and what may justifiably be inferred from the resulting data? How well-tested or confirmed are hypotheses with data? How can statistical models and methods bridge the gaps between data and scientific claims of interest? These general questions are entwined with long standing philosophical debates, so it is no wonder that the statistics crosses over so often into philosophical territory.
The "meeting grounds" of statistical science and philosophy of science are or should be connected by a two-way street: while general philosophical questions about evidence and inference bear on statistical questions (about methods to use, and how to interpret them), statistical methods bear on philosophical problems about inference and knowledge. As interesting as this two-way street has been over many years, we seem to be in need of some entirely new traffic patterns! That is the basis for this forum. Contributions grew out of a conference (June 2010, London School of Economics, Center for the Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, CPNSS) and conversations initiated soon after.
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Contributions
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