Volume 18, Numbers 6-7, 839-860, DOI: 10.1007/s11191-007-9114-6

The Interplay of Scientific Activity, Worldviews and Value Outlooks

Hugh Lacey

From the issue entitled "Special Issue: Science, Worldviews and Education / Edited by M. R. Matthews"

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Abstract

Scientific activity tends to reflect particular worldviews and their associated value outlooks; and scientific results sometimes have implications for worldviews and the presuppositions of value outlooks. Even so, scientific activity per se neither presupposes nor provides sound rational grounds to accept any worldview or value outlook. Moreover, in virtue of reflecting a suitable variety of worldviews and value outlooks, perhaps including some religious ones, science is better able to further its aim. An extended argument is made that, although the materialist worldview has de facto been widely associated with the development of modern science, the scope of scientific inquiry is improperly limited when constraints, derived from materialism, are generally placed upon admissible scientific theories. Some implications for science education are sketched in the conclusion.

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