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  • Imagine being alive when Albert Einstein was developing his theories of relativity.

  • Or witnessing the birth of psychology, as Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis took over the scientific mainstream.

  • The early 1900s was an amazing time for Western science.

  • There was another figure on the intellectual scene when these great minds were at work.

  • Young philosopher Karl Popper was born in Austria -- Freud’s home turf -- but built

  • his career in Britain, giving serious consideration to the new ways that these and other scientists

  • of the time were thinking about the world.

  • And after looking at different methods that people like Einstein and Freud were using,

  • Popper came to understand that not all scientific achievement was created equal.

  • He ended up making an important distinction, between scienceand what he called pseudo-science.

  • And in the process of doing this, he taught us volumes about the nature of knowledge itself,

  • and how we can best test it, and challenge it, to bring us closer to the truth.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Emerging at roughly the same point in history, Freud and Einstein both made predictions that

  • they hoped would help us better understand our world.

  • Freud, concerned with the individual psyche, predicted that our childhood experiences would

  • have a heavy bearing on who we grew up to be.

  • Meanwhile, Einstein waited patiently for a solar eclipse that could disprove his entire

  • general theory of relativity, depending on what it would reveal about how light travels through space.

  • And then there was Karl Popper, born in 1902, who grew up to observe these predictions with

  • keen interest. As a young scholar, he learned about the psychoanalytic theories of Freud,

  • and attended lectures given by Einstein himself about the rules of the universe.

  • And he noticed that these great thinkers used different methods.

  • For example, Popper observed that Freud was able to make just about any data point work

  • in service of his theory. Freud could explain a person’s intimacy issues both in terms

  • of not being hugged enough as a child, or in terms of having been hugged too much. Meanwhile,

  • almost any behavior on the part of a female could be explained in terms of penis envy.

  • Evidence to support Freud’s theories seemed to be everywhere!

  • But Popper saw that Einstein was making a different type of prediction.

  • Instead of looking backward, and using past data topredictthe present, he was

  • looking ahead, and predicting future states of affairs. Einstein’s theory was truly

  • risky, Popper realized. Because, if the future didn’t match his predictions, then his theory

  • would be conclusively disproven. If the results of the solar eclipse in 1919 had been different,

  • general relativity would have been finished.

  • Freud, on the other hand, could always just read the past differently, so as to maintain

  • some kind of confirmation of his theory.

  • Suddenly, Popper understood the difference between the science that Einstein was doing,

  • and what Freud was doing, which Popper rather snootily referred to as pseudo-science.

  • Now, whether psychology today is considered a hard science or a social science or some

  • other kind might be debatable. But you won’t find many mainstream thinkers who consider

  • it pseudoscience. But still, nearly a hundred years ago, when Popper was reaching these

  • conclusions, no modern philosopher had really characterized whatsciencetruly meant

  • -- and what the implications were for the pursuit of knowledge.

  • The traditional understanding of the scientific method, going all the way back to the ancient

  • Greeks, relied on the belief that, to look at the world with a scientific eye is to observe

  • with no preconceived notions.

  • You simply look, see what you see, and then develop hypotheses based on those observations.

  • So, you look at a swan, and you notice it’s white. You look at another swan; it’s white too.

  • You look at enough white swans, and eventually you form the hypothesis that all swans are white.

  • This is what Freud said he was doing: Observing relationships -- but instead of it being between

  • the relationship swans and colors, it was between particular human phenomena and human behavior.

  • But Popper argued that everyone has preconceived notions of some kind. We all start out with

  • a hunch, whether we admit it or not.

  • After all, what you decide to observe is determined by what you already care about enough to observe

  • in the first place and the fact that you care about it so much also means that you already

  • have some beliefs about it.

  • So, what does that tell us about Freud?

  • Popper became convinced that methods like his that only served to confirm beliefs were pseudo-science.

  • And they could be used to prove anything.

  • Consider the existence of Santa Claus. If I try to find evidence of Santa’s existence,

  • I’m going to find it, easily. The world is filled with evidence of Santa Claus! There

  • are presents under the tree on Christmas morning. There’s the guy at the mall. And then there

  • are all those songs, and stories, and tv shows, and moviesthey combine to confirm your belief in Santa.

  • But Popper would argue that it’s only by seeking to disprove Santa’s existence that you can demonstrate his unreality.

  • So the question is, when we begin to test a theory, are we looking to confirm it, or disconfirm it?

  • This is the key point, for Popperscience disconfirms, while pseudoscience confirms.

  • He elaborated on this insight by establishing a series of distinct conclusions about science and knowledge.

  • First, he said, it’s easy to find confirmation of a theory if youre looking for it.

  • Remember the presents under the tree? If youre looking for proof that Santa exists, youre not

  • likely to keep searching for contradictory evidence after that.

  • Second, confirmation should only count if it comes from risky predictionsones that

  • could actually destroy your theory. Because, Popper observed that every good scientific

  • theory is prohibitiveit rules things out.

  • This might sound strange, because no one wants to be wrong, but Popper says that every false

  • belief we discover is actually good, because that gets us that much closer to believing only true things.

  • Next, Popper argued that the only genuine test of a theory is one that’s attempting to falsify it.

  • So, if you were to test for Santa’s reality, your method would require you to try to prove that he doesn’t exist,

  • rather than proving that he does. So, you stay up all night, waiting to catch him delivering his presents.

  • This is risky, because if the person who actually shows up to put presents under the tree is your Dad,

  • then youve destroyed the Santa hypothesis.

  • On a very similar note, Popper also pointed out that irrefutable theories are not scientific.

  • If it can’t be tested, then your theory doesn’t have much value.

  • Like, you can only confirm that Santa is real by doing everything in your power to prove

  • that he’s imaginary, and then failing to do so. So you need to be tugging on Santa

  • beards at the mall. You need to investigate reports of Santa sightings, and other weirdoes

  • caught breaking into peopleshouses through their chimneys. If you want to be able to

  • really trust in your belief in Santa, in a genuinely scientific way, you need to put

  • your belief to the test, in every way you can imagine.

  • This is where Popper says that you have earned the right to call a theory scientific.

  • And finally, once youve disproven your theory, Popper said, you need to be willing to give it up.

  • I mean, you can still cling to the Santa myth, even after catching your Dad putting gifts under the tree,

  • by accepting his lie that Santa had dropped the gifts off earlier, and that he was justhelping.”

  • But, if youre a scientist, youre gonna have to be willing to let your beliefs go.

  • Accept the evidence. Move on.

  • And this is the modern scientific thinking that we accept today: Testable, refutable, falsifiable.

  • You don’t seek to prove scientific hypotheses right, you only prove them wrong.

  • A lot of this might seem so obvious that maybe youre wonder why were talking about it.

  • But that’s how right Popper washe was one of those rare philosophers who actually

  • managed to hit on an idea so right that we don’t even really argue about it anymore.

  • So, it sounds like I’ve been talking mainly about science all this time. But Popper and

  • his insights actually tell us a lot about knowledge, in the philosophical sense.

  • For Popper, knowledge was about probability and contingency. We are justified in believing

  • whatever seems most probable given our current data. And we should always be willing to revise

  • our beliefs in the light of new evidence. In other words, our belief should be contingent on the data themselves.

  • This wouldn’t have satisfied Descartes, who was always concerned about certainty.

  • But Popper never thought that certainty was possible in the first place. If anything,

  • he thought being certain of something causes you to close your mind, and that’s

  • not what we want. Always remaining open to the idea that your current beliefs might be

  • wrong is the best way to get ever closer to truth.

  • So where does this leave us?

  • Remember, we started out trying to prove that we know the things we thought we knew. But

  • you have to be open to the idea that your beliefs might be false -- because that’s

  • the only way that holding onto them can really mean anything. Otherwise, were all just

  • believing whatever we want, with no grounds for adjudicating between beliefs.

  • You should keep that in mind, because that’s the name of the game for the rest of this course.

  • You only get to believe the things you have reasons for, and were going to

  • start with the area that is hardest for most peopleGod. Hope to see you there.

  • Today you learned about Karl Popper, and his insights into science, pseudoscience, and

  • knowledge -- which might best be summarized as science disconfirms, while pseudoscience confirms.

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