Kauzalitás
lecture course ( in Hungarian)
(Mon 18:00 - 19:30, TTK, Déli Tömb
0-820 Hunfalvy János terem)
Kódok:
FLN-300
BMA-FILD-401
BBN-FIL-401
BMA-LOTD-206
VKN-66
BMI-LOTD-206E
xxxn9512
>>>The same lecture in English: Thu 16:00 - 17:30, i/-104
What does causation
consist in, and, depending on the possible answers, what are the basic
characteristics of a causal relationship? -- this is the main topic of
the lecture course. We shall also discuss the most important
contexts of causality: the relationship of causality to concepts of
explanation, law-like regularity, statistical correlation, time,
modality, and logical inference. Our considerations will be based on the
analysis of the causal narratives in our scientific, first of all,
physical theories; rather than our every day experiences or common sense
intuition.
The lecture slides: pdf
Further suggested readings:
- E. Szabó László: A nyitott jövő
problémája - véletlen, kauzalitás és determinizmus a fizikában,
Typotex Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 2002. (A könyv javított digitális
kiadása PDF formában letölthető innen.)
- Causation, Oxford Readings in Philosophy, E. Sosa and M. Tooley, eds., Oxford University Press (1997)
- Huoranszki F. (2001): Modern metafizika, Osiris Kiadó, Budapest.
- Belnap, N. (1992): Branching space-time, Synthese 92, 385.
-
H. Reichenbach: The philosophy
of space and time, Dover Publications, New York, 1958.
- G. Hofer-Szabó, M. Rédei, L. E. Szabó: The Principle of the Common Cause, Cambridge University Press, 2013.
- E.
Szabó László, Gyenis Balázs,
Gyenis Zalán, Rédei Miklós, Szabó
Gábor: Korrelációk kauzális
magyarázata, Magyar
Filozófiai Szemle, 54.
(2010) 78. old.
- The
Einstein--Podolsky--Rosen Argument
and the Bell Inequalities, Internet
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2008)
2014-02-04
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TTK-s és IK-s BSc hallgatók!
Filozófia
minor
TTK-s
és IK-s BSc hallgatók!
Logika és
tudományelmélet MA szak
benne
A
fizika filozófiája
vagy
A
matematika filozófiája
alprogrammal!
|
(in
English)
The
program focuses
on logic and its
applications in the
philosophy of science,
particularly in the
foundations of
mathematics, physics,
linguistics and the social
sciences. Beyond a few
core courses and a joint
four-semester seminar
series aimed at providing
a common background to all
students, we offer the
following four modules:
- Logic and the
Philosophy of
Mathematics
- Philosophy of Physics
- Logic in
Linguistics
- Models in the
Social Sciences
Students
have to select one of
these modules based on
their personal field of
interest.
>>> Further details
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