IB TOK 1 Resources Notes Lagemat PDF
IB TOK 1 Resources Notes Lagemat PDF
IB TOK 1 Resources Notes Lagemat PDF
Introduction
These notes are designed to provide an easy-to-use summary of Theory of Knowledge for the IB
Diploma by Richard van de Lagemaat.
The notes link to the other Theory of Knowledge for the IB Diploma resources available on this
website in order to provide a complete teaching resource for the course. Cross-references to the main
textbook are given for every resource.
TOK assessment
It is necessary to fully understand the marking criteria of TOK assessment if you understand the
target, you can work towards providing the theoretical knowledge and skills to reach it. This section
will therefore set out what has to be done to meet the IBOs marking criteria for Theory of
Knowledge.
Assessments
Group presentations are allowable: max. 5 students per group, but 23 seems to work best.
Marks for TOK and the extended essay (EE) are combined for conversion into diploma points. The
significance of TOK is thus apparent:
That means there is a significant chance of not scoring many IB points as a result of TOK and EE
efforts. The necessity to know how to score points for TOK thus becomes obvious, especially if
university entry depends on IB points scored.
A 4860 marks
B 3847 marks
C 2937 marks
D 1928 marks
E 018 marks diploma requirement goes up from 24 to 28 points
(Source: IBO November 2009/May 2010 Subject Reports. Theory of Knowledge. Available on the teachers area of the IBO
website.)
Requirements
10 minutes per presenter, max. 30 minutes per group (max. 5 students; 23 recommended).
Every group must cover a different topic.
Use supporting material, e.g. video, PowerPoint, posters, questionnaires, recordings,
costumes, props, etc.
Absolutely not to be an essay/notes read out.
Suggestions:
Give 48 weeks notice and allow group work time in class.
Plan for 3 practice presentations before the assessed presentation, e.g. 1 per term, year 1.
Schools must record the presentations. Notified schools will need to submit recordings to the IB for
review. All schools should keep the recordings until the session ends on the IB set date (mid-
September for May exams or mid-March for November exams).
Brief introduction:
Identify a real-life situation/contemporary problem.
Identify personal involvement in the situation it is hard to separate hard facts from opinions,
especially when our analytical viewpoint is biased by our own situation.
Identify a knowledge issue and explain why it is important to the real-life situation.
Link to one (or more) identified knowledge issues (these must be very relevant to the real-life
situation).
Exploration (analysis):
For the identified knowledge area, analyse the identified knowledge claims and link to different
perspectives (e.g. arising from areas of knowledge, different ways of knowing, different theoretical
approaches, different cultures). The quality of the links is more important than the quantity.
To do this:
recognise the underlying assumption of each knowledge claim/issue
recognise the implications of different perspectives
link to real examples
recognise other knowledge issues raised by the analysis
include personal arguments and examples
cite sources
link all back to the original real-life situation.
Identify your personal involvement in the situation and recognise that it is hard to separate
hard facts from opinions, especially when our analytical viewpoint is biased by our own
situation:
Link to one or more identified knowledge issues that are very relevant to the real-life
situation:
Electronic submission
Details can be found on the IBO website in the document Theory of Knowledge:
Understanding Knowledge Issues.
Students upload essays electronically to https://candidates.ibo.org. They log in using their six-
character IB code plus a PIN issued by their schools IB Coordinator.
The essay is then passed electronically to the teacher for marking and authentication.
The IB Coordinator then submits it to the IB with their marks. The deadline is about three
weeks after the deadline for essay upload.
The IBO sends it electronically to an examiner for marking.
There is a two-month window for submission. Specific dates are set by the IBO but it is
approximately as follows:
May exams: mid-January to mid-March submission of essay
November exams: mid-July to mid-September submission.
It is suggested that an internal school deadline of the end of term 4 of the IB course is set.
Essay titles
A set list of possible titles is published by the IB in the annually updated Handbook of Procedures for
the Diploma Programme. Students must be careful to stick exactly to the set title.
Conclusion:
All maps distort reality.
The map is not the territory; it is just an attempt to represent it.
Distortion of maps can distort other views/opinions/decisions.
Certainty (p. 8)
Language
How do we know that what we find out in words is true?
Are other people reliable sources of knowledge?
Emotion
Intuition/gut feeling is not always 100% reliable.
Reason
Lots of people struggle with logic, especially mathematical logic.
Note: Use the acronym PLER to help you remember the four ways of knowing.
There is a problem with the word should, which implies subjective judgement. TOK is more
interested in how you believe.
Different views:
Socrates (470399 BCE): The unexamined life is not worth living.
van de Lagemaat (Coursebook author): If you never examine your beliefs you end up
leading a life that is not genuinely your own.
Voltaire (philosopher, 16941778): People who believe absurdities will commit atrocities.
(Though remember to question the use of the word will!)
Beliefs affect actions and can have serious consequences.
A problem of knowledge (knowledge issues) exists: what we believe we know may be questionable.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 18
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Sciences finest hour p. 19
The uncertainty of knowledge p. 21
Truth v. belief
Just when you think you know about something, you learn about it in more depth and realise your
previous knowledge was superficial.
Information disconnected facts (e.g. cramming facts for an exam but lacking real
understanding).
Knowledge facts connected by logic to help the facts make sense (e.g. problem-
solving/arriving at understood knowledge by considering all the facts).
Beware: This may be questionable because it is not first-hand knowledge, and even first-hand
knowledge may be biased by ways of knowing (perception, language, emotion, reason).
Language enables us to pass on our beliefs and practices to each other in the form of culture.
Beware: Always question the reliability of the sources (avoid authority worship).
See also:
Linking questions: p. 39
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Rational and intuitive knowledge p. 40
Brechts Galileo p. 42
Language enables us to tap into the collective experience of the community. It is a form of
communication that is:
governed by arbitrary rules of grammar
expressed orally as sounds linking to objects or concepts
intended
used creatively to communicate vast numbers of ideas.
We need to understand the meaning of language before its truth can be assessed.
Examples:
The difference between murder and manslaughter can mean a life or death sentence for the
accused.
To reduce unemployment or poverty, the authorities may redefine the words, thus changing
statistics.
Language affects the way we think and hence the judgements we make.
Use of labels (words) to classify things, e.g. apples, sand:
can be efficient
may reflect natural classifications or cultural impositions on the world.
Problems:
Differences that are not immediately apparent may be overlooked.
Adjectives paint inefficient verbal portraits.
Labels may develop into stereotypes, e.g. assumptions about members of groups of people.
Examples:
The Inuit are said to have many words for snow, so they see and experience snow-covered
landscapes differently from other people.
The North American Hopi Indians have no words for present, past, future. Whorf therefore
came to the conclusion that the Hopi have no concept of abstract time.
Against:
Babies and animals can think without language.
Some people claim to think in images (which may be an effort to put into words).
If language determines thought, new words could not arise.
2 Weasel words
Words added to a sentence to protect accuracy, e.g. most dogs bark.
3 Grammar
Use of passive sentence constructions to protect the speaker, e.g. We bombed the village / The
village was bombed.
Soldiers are more likely to kill enemies who are dehumanised, e.g. turkey shoot, Gooks.
Alternative words are used to make war more acceptable:
See also:
Linking questions: p. 78
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Dialogue on animal language p. 79
The day a language died p. 83
Our sense of smell has a more direct route to the brain than the other senses. It can stimulate
emotional and/or sexual response, memories, etc. (The perfume industry cashes in on this.)
Empiricism
All knowledge is based on perceptual experience.
Phenomenalism
(This is a more extreme extension of empiricism.)
Matter is the permanent possibility of sensation. It makes no sense to say that the world exists
independently of our experience of it.
Irish philosopher George Berkeley (16851753): To be is to be perceived.
It does not mean that if something is not perceived it does not exist. It is just that if we do not
perceive it, it may not exist. For example, does your home still exist when you cannot see it?
Common-sense realism
Observation does not affect what is observed. If our senses were not reliable we would not have
survived as a species.
Active realism
Our perception is based on what is out there, but is filtered by the structure of our sense organs.
Scientific realism
The world exists as an independent reality very different from the way we perceive it. Our world has
sound, smell, etc. The physical world consists of colourless, soundless atoms whizzing in empty
space.
External stimulus sense cells stimulated brain unconsciously filters incoming information
subjective interpretation personal version of reality.
Eye-witness testimony can differ. Every time we remember something we reconstruct it in our minds
reliability is undermined.
We may:
1 misinterpret what we see
2 fail to notice something
3 misremember what we have seen.
Our perceptions are filtered by the limitations of our sensory cells (also known as the psychology of
perception):
Sense Limitation
Sight Wavelength of light.
Sound Wavelength of sound.
(Bats also have echo-location, or sound
vision.)
Smell Only certain kinds of smell stimulate sensory
cells in nose.
Touch Minimal stimulation necessary in order to fire
sensory cells in skin.
Taste Only certain chemicals stimulate sensory cells
in tongue.
External stimulus sense cells stimulated brain unconsciously filters incoming information
subjective interpretation personal version of reality.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 104
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Blind to change p. 105
A world without patterns, faces without meaning p. 108
Neils Bohr (18851962) to Einstein: You are not thinking. You are merely being logical.
deductive
inductive
informal
A general claim about all leads to a specific claim about an individual, for example:
Problems:
The reasoning may be valid but the conclusion may not always be true/valid if:
one or both premises are flawed
the reasoning used to reach the conclusion is flawed, e.g. Penguins are black and
white. Old TV shows are black and white therefore penguins are old TV shows.
Venn diagrams can be used to visually represent valid reasoning (pp. 1167).
Examples:
All observed humans have eventually died, therefore all humans eventually die.
That French waiter was rude to me, therefore French people are rude!
Discussions: Activities 5.7, 5.8, 5.9 and 5.10 (answers p. 138), pp. 120, 122
Problems:
Avoidance of hasty generalisation depends on:
number of observations
variety of observations
active searching for exceptions
coherence: more evidence is needed for surprising conclusions
subject area: generalisations are more reliable in natural sciences (physics, chemistry,
biology) than social sciences (psychology, economics, business).
Discussion: If someone often tells lies should you discount their trial evidence?
4 Circular reasoning (vicious circle/begging the question; see p. 125). Assuming the truth of
something you are supposed to be proving. For example, I know Mary is a fairy because she
said she was and fairies would not lie. This assumes that Mary is a fairy in order to argue that
she is a fairy.
5 Special pleading (p. 126). There is a tendency for people to apply laws of expected behaviour
to other people that they do not stick to themselves, e.g. energy conservation, need to limit
world population.
6 Equivocation (p. 126). The same word may be used in different ways. Leads to arguments
about meaning, e.g. A hamburger is better than nothing. Nothing is better than good health.
Therefore, a hamburger is better than good health.
7 Argument ad ignorantiam (p. 127). Claims something is true because you have no evidence
to disprove it, e.g. There is no evidence to disprove she is a witch, so she is a witch.
8 False analogy (p. 128). Assumes that because two things are similar in some ways, they are
similar in another way, e.g. Problems are like mountains. Because mountains are worn down
by rain, our problems can be solved by persistence.
9 False dilemma (binary thinking, p. 128). Assumes only two alternatives exist. (Note: humans
may have a tendency towards this.) For example, increasing military expenditure means
spending less on schools this suggests that we have only two choices. This way of thinking
may have developed because evolution may have depended on fast friend/foe, fight/flight
decisions.
10 Loaded questions (p. 128). Questions that imply built-in assumptions, e.g. Do you always
cheat in exams? Yes suggests you always cheat in exams; no suggests you sometimes
cheat in exams.
Activities: 5.15 and 5.16 (useful for class computer search exercise), pp. 1301
We are often tempted to resort to any argument to justify our reasoning rationalisation.
All proof must end somewhere it cannot be infinitely regressive (requiring the evidence of more
and more things, successively and indefinitely).
For example, A depends on B, which depends on C, which depends on D and so on, to infinity.
Three laws of thought are the basis of logical deductive reasoning:
Law of identity: e.g. if A is a banana, then it is a banana.
Law of non-contradiction: e.g. if A is a banana then it cannot be not-a-banana. (Common
objection: some things are a mix of two other things, e.g. lovehate relationship love some
things at some times, hate them at other times.)
Law of the excluded middle: e.g. everything is either a banana or not a banana.
Can deductive reasoning (the laws of logical reasoning) be doubted? (p. 1334)
1 It is unsure whether the laws exist or whether we just think they exist.
2 Logic depends on language, which is imprecise.
3 Everything is constantly changing so there is nothing for logic to be true of.
Yes:
Just because something always seems to happen it does not mean it always will (e.g. laws of
physics, behaviour of people).
No:
It seems advantageous to use past experience to predict the future.
Edward de Bono (1933): Vertical thinking is digging the same hole deeper. Lateral thinking is
trying elsewhere.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 140
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
The triumph of the yell p. 141
Logic and cultural relativism p. 143
The word emotion is derived from the Latin verb movere (to move).
A study of a patient who suffered damage to the emotional area of his brain showed no drop in IQ, but
he had lost the ability to make decisions. Psychologist Antonio Damasio said that emotion helps
narrow down options so we have a manageable number of choices.
Romanticism
Emotions are necessary to make sense of the world. Many fundamental beliefs are based on intuition.
Criticisms:
Different people have conflicting intuition: whose is better?
Intuition may be based on prejudice.
Biology
100 years ago it was obvious that one species could not become another. Now biologists
argue for evolution.
Ethics
Ethics may change over time.
Ethics can be different in different societies.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 168
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Rethinking thinking p. 169
Fools for love p. 172
Analytic propositions
An analytic proposition is one that is true by definition. There are two main types of analytic
proposition:
A definitional truth defines a word, e.g. All bachelors are unmarried men.
Empirical propositions
A proposition whose truth or falsity is based on perception, e.g. Pandas eat bamboo. Most
knowledge in natural sciences, social sciences and history is empirical.
Value-judgements
A judgement that contains a value word, e.g. good, bad, right, wrong, beautiful, etc.
Metaphysical propositions
Statements that are neither analytic, empirical nor a value-judgement, and that concern the nature of
ultimate reality. Examples include statements about God, time, death, rebirth and the meaning of life.
The distinction between the four types of proposition is not always clear.
(An eleventh fallacy to add to the list of ten deadly fallacies see Chapter 5.)
We sometimes assume we have explained something just because we have used a posh or technical
term to describe it, e.g. Sleeping pills put people to sleep because they have dormative powers. But
dormative powers just means the ability to put people to sleep, so this actually means that sleeping
pills put people to sleep because they have the power to put people to sleep.
Some words can be used factually (empirically) or as value-judgements, e.g. liar, gossip,
patient. Many words have positive and negative connotations and this also blurs the dividing
line between facts and values.
Empirical facts may be relevant to the justification of value-judgements, e.g. Bill can swim
100 metres (empirical), so Bill is a good swimmer (value-judgement).
Some empirical facts may be relevant to the justification of metaphysics, e.g. the order of the
universe must justify the existence of God.
If an empirical fact is pushed hard enough, it collapses into a metaphysical one, e.g. I know
that my keys are on the table. But how can you be sure you are not dreaming? All
beliefs ultimately rely on metaphysical beliefs (core intuitions, Chapter 6) about reality.
Paradigm = a set of interrelated ideas for making sense of one or more aspects of reality, e.g. a
scientific theory.
From the Greek, paradeigma (pattern).
Cultures can be considered as paradigms: they can be seen as maps of meaning that help us make
sense of reality.
Paradigms help organise ideas into meaningful patterns. However, they also act as knowledge filters
which close our minds to other possibilities. We are often unaware this is happening.
A paradigm shift occurs when we change the perspective of our thinking (thinking outside the box)
and come up with a new way of looking at something, e.g. ambiguous images (see Chapter 4), jokes.
Mathematics is often seen to be one of the few things that are certain. Context is ignored and thinking
is purely abstract.
Axioms
Axioms (basic assumptions) are:
consistent
independent (you cannot derive one axiom/assumption from another)
simple
fruitful (many theorems can be proved with the fewest number of axioms).
Note: Some mathematicians consider that the final axiom is impossible to prove to infinity.
However:
Proofs only work for the numbers tried out.
Inductive reasoning (see Chapter 5) does not prove it is true for every set of numbers, e.g.
some equations work only for some numbers and not for others.
Goldbachs conjecture
Every even number is the sum of two primes:
2=1+1
4=2+2
6=3+3
8=5+3
and so on
It seems to work for all the numbers anyone has tried, but it may not work for all numbers.
The number of numbers the theory has been tested for is small in relation to untested numbers
to infinity.
Goldbachs conjecture is one of the great, unproven conjectures in number theory.
Wittgenstein (18891951): Where the nonsense starts is with our habit of thinking of a large number
as closer to infinity than a small one.
There may be several proofs of a theorem. Simple proofs are said to be elegant or beautiful.
Examples:
Q: What is the total number of games of knock-out tennis that must be played to find a winner if
1,024 players enter a tournament?
A: 1,023
Reasoning: 1,023 people need to lose a game in order to leave one winner.
Conclusion: creative imagination and intuition are important in mathematics.
Q: A string is tied around a ball. How much more string will be needed for the string to go around the
ball 1 inch from its surface?
A: About 6 inches
Q: So if the string were tied around the Earth, how much more would be needed to go around the
Earth 1 inch from its surface?
A: About 6 inches
Reasoning:
Extra needed = 2 (R+1) 2 (R)
= 2
= 2 3.142
= 6.28 inches
Nature of proposition
How is it knowable? Analytic Synthetic
True by definition and All other propositions that are not
independent of experience. analytic.
A priori All definitions, e.g. Bachelors Not true by definition. Does not need
are unmarried men. experience.
Independent of
experience So is mathematics just a string Plato: Through reason alone we could
of definitions? find out truths about the nature of reality.
Goldbachs conjecture would E.g. Euclidian geometry is based on self-
hence be true: if you define an evident axioms deductive reason
even number as the sum of two theorems.
primes, then any number is true
Descartes (15961650): based on this
by definition.
thinking he tried to establish a whole
system of philosophy based on the axiom,
I think, therefore I am.
Evolution: maybe mathematical ability is
a by-product of other abilities with
survival value.
People who take this line of People who take this line of thinking
thinking believe that maths is believe that mathematical entities exist
invented and exists only in the out there, waiting to be discovered.*
mind.*
*Note: Problem raised about the word exists in formalism and Platonism.
Riemannian geometry
Mathematician Georg Friedrich Bernard Riemann (182266) replaced some of Euclids axioms
with their opposite it works if it is assumed that our geometry is on the surface of a sphere.
Theorems deduced from Riemanns axioms are:
All perpendiculars to a straight line meet at one point. (Lines of longitude are perpendicular to
the equator and meet at the poles.)
Two straight lines enclose an area. (For example, lines of longitude.)
The sum of the angles of any triangle is greater than 180 degrees. (This is true between
curved lines on the surface of a sphere.)
Note: Einsteins theory of relativity is based on the theory that space is curved.
This is mathematics used to model and solve problems in the real world.
Riemann
Developed non-Euclidean geometry as an intellectual exercise.
30 years later Einstein concluded that space conforms to Riemannian, not Euclidean,
geometry.
Einstein
Mathematical systems are invented. Empirical observation helps decide which systems apply
to reality.
Mathematics was defined at the start of the chapter as the science of rigorous proof.
Gdels proof shows that there is no certainty.
It is therefore uncertain whether mathematics is the best tool for making sense of reality.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 212
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Why is math so useful? p. 213
Think maths p. 215
Scientia is the Latin word for knowledge. The extraordinary success of the natural sciences has led
some people to see them as the dominant cognitive paradigm, or model of knowledge. However, we
should be careful since scientific beliefs have changed over time, we might wonder how far the
natural sciences really do give us certainty.
Pseudo-science claims the status of science but without the basis of scientific testing. It includes:
acupuncture
astrology
creationism
crystology
feng shui
graphology
homeopathy
phrenology.
Experiments are:
controllable
measurable
repeatable.
Relevance
Expectations
Our expectations can influence what we think we see. For example, if you look at a cell down a
microscope, what you draw is influenced by structure learned in class. It is hard to draw what you
actually see.
Expert seeing
The use of scientific equipment such as microscopes or telescopes further complicates things. Today
experimental telescopes are viewed through a computer, which enhances detail the eye cannot see.
So is the information just a result of the computer programme?
Gregor Mendel (182284), who laid the foundations of genetics, has been accused by some of only
reporting results that favoured his case as his results supported his hypothesis and laws too accurately.
Many different hypotheses are consistent with a given set of data (p. 232)
It may be impossible to prove which is true.
The principle of simplicity directs scientists to choose the simplest hypothesis. This is
justified by the orderliness and predictability of nature, but it may not be the correct
hypothesis.
Inductive reasoning goes from the particular to the general (from the observed to the unobserved).
Practical problems
How many observations are enough?
Even well-confirmed hypotheses can later turn out to be wrong.
Most scientists believe they really are discovering the fundamental laws of the universe, yet
we have observed only a minute fraction of the universe.
Theoretical problems
Science is supposed to be an empirical discipline that makes no claims beyond what is
observed.
However, this would stop any hypothesising from the particular to the general.
Karl Popper (190294) rejected theories that tried to explain everything, e.g. Marx, Freud, Adler.
Alfred Adler (18701937) believed that human beings are dominated by feelings of inferiority. For
example, a man sees someone drowning. If he jumps in to rescue them, it can be explained that he is
trying to show he is not inferior. If he does not try the rescue it can be explained that he is feeling too
inferior to do it.
Chemistry
Dimitri Mendeleyev (18341907) came up with the periodic table by arranging elements
according to their atomic weights.
The weights of some elements did not quite fit his model.
He concluded he had measured incorrectly.
He was right: isotopes caused the odd masses.
Biology
Charles Darwins (180982) theory of evolution required the earth to be hundreds of
millions of years old to allow enough time for species to evolve.
Lord Kelvin (18241907), the leading physicist of the day, calculated that the earth was no
more than 100 million years old.
Kelvins method was found to be wrong.
Thomas Kuhn (192296), a historian and philosopher of science, introduced the concept of a
paradigm to the philosophy of science.
Paradigm: an overarching theory shared by scientists from different scientific fields used to make
sense of reality. Examples include:
physics: Newtonian mechanics
chemistry: atomic theory
biology: evolutionary theory.
Scientism
Rudolf Carnap (18911970) suggested that science is the only way we can make sense of reality and
discover truth: i.e. it can find all the answers to all the questions.
However, our consideration here has found science to be a fallible human enterprise. It may get closer
to the truth but can never give us absolute certainty.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 249
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Crystalline truth and crystal balls p. 250
The fallacy of scientific objectivity p. 253
Problems:
You cannot observe peoples minds or their actual thinking.
People tend to overestimate their strengths and underestimate their weaknesses, e.g. in a study
of one million US high school students, all ranked themselves above average in their ability
to get on with others.
Habituation is used to overcome the observer effect: e.g. anthropologists may go native so the
observed eventually behave normally.
Economics
Peoples expectations affect the stock market.
Anthropology
It is claimed that witch doctor spells can make people die (voodoo death).
One explanation for this is that people in certain cultures are conditioned from birth to expect
voodoo to work.
Some things are not measurable on a common scale so are difficult to compare.
Human scientists may have to wait for nature to provide the appropriate experimental conditions, e.g.
economic history can provide experimental data; we can learn something about normal brain
functions by looking at people who have suffered brain damage.
Human predictability
The idea of human free-will seems to conflict with the idea of human behaviour conforming to
predictable laws.
Ernest Rutherford (18711937): The only possible conclusion the social sciences can draw is: some
do, some dont.
Criticisms:
The reductive fallacy is the fallacy of saying that just because A is composed of B, it follows
that A is nothing but B, e.g. a human being is nothing but a bunch of chemicals.
There are good reasons for doubting this approach when simple things are combined the
results cannot always be predicted.
It therefore seems unlikely that we will ever be able to explain the human sciences in terms of
physics.
Since human sciences are explained in terms of meaning (rather than mechanism):
meaning may depend on context
unintended consequences of actions need to be taken into account
it is therefore difficult to generalise into universal laws.
Criticism: Some human traits do seem to be universal and independent of culture, e.g. gossiping,
joking.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 282
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Soft sciences are often harder than hard sciences p. 283
Is economics a science? p. 286
How can we reconcile the belief that human beings have free-will with our scientific picture
of the world?
The existence of free-will is central to our conception of what it is to be a responsible human
being. To deny its existence would reduce us to biological machines.
Beware: Determinism is not the same as fatalism (the future is determined no matter what you do
i.e. destiny).
Criticisms:
The more someone is addicted to something the less they will be able to exercise free-will in
the future (e.g. chemical addiction), so past decisions would affect (determine?) current
choices.
Some choices are determined by the sort of person we are and so cannot be called free.
Although you can do what you want, your wants and desires may be governed by factors
beyond your control.
Big problem:
If determinism is true, it would mean that we have no free choice in what we say, in the
choice of words used: there would be no difference between speech and a dog barking.
Evidence
History is the study of present evidence (traces) of the past. We encounter two problems when trying
to reconstruct the past:
distant history too little evidence
recent history too much evidence
2 Study of history can be a defence against propaganda, but it can conversely be used as an
instrument of social or political manipulation.
Discussions: Figs. 10.3 and 10.4 with following description, pp. 3056; Activity 10.6, p. 306
3 History enriches our sense of human nature. The study of what humans did in situations in
the past can help us understand human nature. It can supplement the study of psychology,
sociology and economics.
Beware of sentences that state: History shows that This may lead to self-realising
expectations. It makes it seem as if humans will always be like that, so there is no point
trying to change.
Discussion: Sceptics could argue that God created everything five seconds ago (including historical
records!).
The historian G. R. Elton (192194) argued that history is more objective than science because it
cannot be changed.
However, the past may be objective, but our knowledge of the past is not. Samuel Butler (1835
1902): Though God cannot alter the past, historians can.
History is more than a catalogue of past events: historians try to explain and interpret the past.
Current interests of historians lead to:
topic choice bias (though this does not necessarily lead to biased treatment of sources)
influence of hindsight/overview
confirmation bias (historians may choose information to prove their hypothesis, though note
that good historians try to disprove hypotheses)
national bias influence of pre-existing cultural and political prejudices (other historians may
pick up on this).
Historian R. G. Collingwood (18891943) drew attention to the importance of empathy, i.e. going
beyond the study of outside events and getting into the minds of the people involved in order to
understand why they did what they did, e.g. by the use of ideas from psychoanalysis.
Criticisms:
It is difficult to empathise with monsters of history.
Why limit yourself to one persons view?
It may exaggerate the importance of particular individuals. For example, Leo Tolstoy (1828
1910) argued in War and Peace that Napoleon was not in control of events but was just a
passive instrument of deeper historical currents.
Criticisms:
Marxs own predictions about where revolutions would occur did not come true.
The philosopher Karl Popper (190294) described Marxs idea of the future being
predictable as not just implausible, but incoherent. His reasoning was that if you can predict
the future, you can predict future inventions, which means you would have discovered them
now, not in the future so you are not predicting the future.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 321
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Changing the past p. 322
History as some kind of a novel p. 325
Calling something art because of the intentions of the artist (pp. 3313)
Basis:
Something is a work of art if the maker intended it to evoke an aesthetic response.
If something is intended as a work of art, then it should not be made with a practical use in
mind.
Criticism:
Does intending something to be art automatically make it art? Or might it just be junk?
Calling something art because of the quality of the work (pp. 3336)
Basis:
The idea of quality is very closely connected with the idea of skill.
A great work of art is a perfect combination of content (what it shows) and form (how it
shows it).
It may not be beautiful.
It may even be intended to shock.
Criticism:
A work of art may be technically excellent but lack originality, e.g. kitsch art clichd or
mass-produced art, forgeries.
It may be original but lack technical skill, e.g. Picassos Bulls Head (see p. 335).
Calling something art because of the response of the spectators (p. 336)
Basis:
A work of art requires people to appreciate it.
Experts may understand the meaning of a work of art better than the artist who made the
work.
Criticism:
The response to a work of art may:
change over time (or may be just a fashion)
differ between ordinary people and experts.
How far are our judgements about what distinguishes good art from bad objective and how far are
they influenced by the culture in which we grow up and our personal tastes?
Kant (17241804) said that, unlike personal tastes, aesthetic judgements are
disinterested. If you like a piece of music because it reminds you of a happy time in
your life, you are interested. To be disinterested, we should go beyond our personal tastes
and preferences so that we can appreciate a work of art on its merits.
Aesthetic judgement parallel with sport: someone may not like a sportsman but may
appreciate that he/she is technically good.
Psychological factors
Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid (Russian artists) conducted research into visual art. They:
examined the most popular paintings across a wide range of cultures
found that popular paintings depict landscapes in which the viewer can see without being
seen.
Possible explanations:
Our preference for such landscapes may result from our evolved survival instincts.
The world is dominated by US culture globalisation of taste.
Komar and Melamid also found a similar universality in musical taste. Sense of rhythm in music may
reflect the human pulse.
Discussion: Compare and contrast the styles of the two pictures of Derwent Water, p. 343
Other examples:
Opera: Chinese and European opera differ greatly.
Sport: baseball differs from cricket.
Contrasting cultures may not understand the nature of art in other cultures without help.
Art as imitation
Mimesis is Greek for imitation. The mimetic theory suggests that the purpose of art is to copy
reality. Example artists include Michelangelo (14751564) and Auguste Rodin (18401917).
Important developments:
Fifteenth century: development of perspective
Nineteenth century: invention of the camera
Why try to copy reality in paint when it can be copied at the click of a button?
Led to revolutionary changes in the nature of visual art, music and literature.
Criticisms:
The copy theory does not apply to music.
Art does not merely copy reality, it creatively interprets it.
Paul Klee (18781940), a Swiss painter, said that Art does not reproduce the visible; rather,
it makes visible, i.e. it helps us see things we would not otherwise notice.
Art can also influence the way we subsequently view the world, e.g. paintings, plays, books,
music.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 355
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
How much art can the brain take? p. 356
Which side are you on? p. 361
Value-judgements
Some people argue that moral values are just reflections of personal taste. For example, I dont like
spinach is on a par with abortion is unacceptable.
Criticism:
We accept peoples preferences but expect justification and reasons for value-judgements.
The lack of foundations argument states that appealing to perception and reason does not work for
ethical judgements: there is no way to get from an is statement to an ought statement.
Criticisms:
If you want to be tolerant of everyone you cannot be a relativist because:
not all cultures are tolerant of other opinions, so you would have to accept that it is equally
acceptable to be intolerant
it is difficult to be tolerant of some extreme views, e.g. genocide.
Criticisms:
For much of history, people have had no moral concern for outsiders who do not belong to their
community. However, in recent times, the idea of the tribe is (slowly) expanding to include all
humans.
Even if there is moral knowledge, we are incapable of acting on it because humans are basically
selfish.
Criticisms:
Selfish cannot be used as a criticism if everyone is selfish.
Some people get pleasure from helping others; that does not seem selfish. (But it can be
argued that they only do it to make themselves feel good.)
Criticisms:
Edward O. Wilson (biologist): Cooperative individuals generally survive longer and leave
more offspring.
Young babies and monkeys have demonstrated empathy, so it seems to be a natural part of
our make-up.
Criticisms:
Some actions do not appear to have any reward, e.g. leaving a tip for a waiter you will never see
again.
Criticisms:
There is no reason to think that all good things are motivated by fear (although some are).
If a god thought you were only doing good to avoid punishment after death, would it count as
good?
Personal morals, not fear of punishment, drive some choices and actions even if you knew
you wouldnt be found out, there are still some things you wouldnt be willing to do.
Religious ethics
The simplest solution to different views of right/wrong would be to have a book of rules. Some people
think that such books are to be found in religion.
Criticism:
Religious rulebooks guide moral behaviour, but they sometimes lack advice on key areas, are
worded ambiguously, or include punishments that are not morally acceptable today.
Criticism:
People have conflicting feelings on what is right and wrong.
We engage in special pleading: making excuses to justify our own behaviour that we
would not find acceptable in someone else.
We should adopt a dual conception of ourselves as not only me but also one among others.
This idea lies behind the golden rule, Do as you would be done by.
We can be more objective in deciding duty by asking, How would I feel if someone did that
to me?
The theory of utilitarianism states that we should seek the greatest happiness of the greatest number of
people. It was developed by Jeremy Bentham (17481832) and John Stuart Mill (180673).
They tried to establish ethics on a scientific foundation.
Actions are right in so far as they tend to increase happiness.
Actions are wrong in so far as they tend to decrease happiness.
Total Net Happiness (TNH) for an individual = (sum of pleasures) (sum of displeasures).
Gross National Happiness (GNH) = sum of individual TNH.
Kant would say that it is the motive and not the pleasure that counts (p. 390).
See also:
Linking questions: p. 395
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Relative values: a dialogue p. 396
Against happiness p. 401
What is truth?
Correspondence theory
Coherence theory
Pragmatic theory
Dogmatism = stating your opinions in a strong way and not accepting the views of others.
Maybe the world could be a better place if people held their views with a little humility.
Criticisms:
Just because you are not certain of the truth does not mean it does not exist.
If you accept everyones truth, there are no grounds for evaluating whether something is true
or not and everything is reduced to personal preferences.
The statement There is no truth, refutes itself as soon as you ask if it is true.
This avoids:
the error of dogmatism mistaking a half-truth for the truth
the error of relativism thinking that since truth varies with perspective there is no truth at
all.
There is no reason to believe that the truth will make us happy. However, the longer
we avoid the truth, the bigger the nasty surprises may be later.
Discussion: Trying to make sense of the world is not to reach a destination but to travel with a
different point of view.
See also:
Linking questions: p. 462
Reading resources:
(Teachers may wish to set their own assignments on these.)
Ghosts p. 463
Integrity p. 465