

Science in the 20th century
19 snips Nov 5, 1998
Renowned broadcaster Melvyn Bragg discusses how science in the 20th century shifted from certainty to doubt, integrating with philosophy and social sciences. The podcast explores the limitations of science, importance of doubt, unity in scientific knowledge, reductionism vs. complexity, and the nature of consciousness in relation to artificial intelligence.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Science's Dual Importance
- Science is crucial for democratic decision-making on technology and policies.
- It fosters a worldview grounded in doubt, uncertainty, and probability, essential for understanding reality.
Everything Fits Together Scientifically
- Modern scientific knowledge forms a coherent, unified worldview.
- Apparent scientific conflicts are often misunderstandings or minor debates within a consistent framework.
Science Faces Unresolved Paradoxes
- Significant scientific theories like quantum mechanics and relativity currently remain incompatible.
- Scientific debates, like Dawkins vs Gould, highlight ongoing dialectics vital for progress rather than settled conclusions.