Philosophy of Science: Professor Tim Maudlin at BTG - a podcast by Dr Waseem Akhtar

from 2014-11-30T14:47:55

:: ::

Is philosophy dead? Well over the past few years a number of scientists and researchers have said that we don’t need philosophy, philosophy should not be taught, it is waste of time and some have suggested that philosophy is dead. This is obviously a question that should be discussed at Bridging the Gaps. Tim Maudlin, professor of philosophy at New York University, says that the scientists, particularly physicists, who suggest that philosophy is dead, simply don’t know what is done now-a-days in philosophy of physics.

An important point that Maudlin makes is that if there are philosophers who intend to write about physics and have no expertise in physics, perhaps this is not a good idea. In his view one of the main reasons that negative remarks are being made about philosophy is that philosophers are writing about topics without having expertise in these areas. Maudlin says that if you want to know about the nature of matter, and nature of space and time, and if you want to understand large-scale structure of cosmos, you need input from science.

Maudlin says that tendency in the last forty years has been that philosophers become more and more competent in the particular sciences that they intend to comment on. He notes, “particularly in physics we get people whose training is in physic”. A number of researchers with undergraduate degrees in physics, and some even with doctorates in physics, feel that foundational issues in physics are not appreciated and supported in physics departments. They drift over into philosophy department so that they could easily pursue very foundational and conceptual questions.

After discussing the bittersweet relationship between philosophy and science, we touch upon a number of other topics that Tim Maudlin’s research focuses on, these are:

Nature of Time: is time real, or is it just an illusion? Is time directional?

Nature of Spacetime

Quantum Physics and Entangled Particles

Observer Effect and Wave Collapse Function

Structure of the Universe at the Plank Scale

The title of one of your books is the Metaphysics within Physics, is there
metaphysics within physics?

Can philosophy assist and guide us to understand these difficult to understand concepts?

Further episodes of Bridging the Gaps: A Portal for Curious Minds

Further podcasts by Dr Waseem Akhtar

Website of Dr Waseem Akhtar