Norman Sieroka: Katalogdaten im Frühjahrssemester 2020 |
Name | Herr PD Dr. Norman Sieroka |
Lehrgebiet | Philosophie |
Adresse | Professur für Philosophie ETH Zürich, CLW C 1 Clausiusstrasse 49 8092 Zürich SWITZERLAND |
sieroka@phil.gess.ethz.ch | |
URL | http://www.uni-bremen.de/theophil/sieroka |
Departement | Geistes-, Sozial- und Staatswissenschaften |
Beziehung | Privatdozent |
Nummer | Titel | ECTS | Umfang | Dozierende | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
511-0010-00L | Scientific Concepts and Methods Only for MSc Pharmaceutical Sciences. | 2 KP | 3G | E. Kut Bacs, V. Collado Diaz, L. Dieterich, V. I. Otto, N. Sieroka | |
Kurzbeschreibung | The module is an introductory course fostering critical thinking about scientific concepts and methods in the natural sciences, particularly in pharmaceutical and biomedical research. | ||||
Lernziel | Students • have the ability to explain and reflect upon core themes in philosophy of science and cutting edge methods that are relevant in modern pharmaceutical and biomedical research. • are able to explain the role experiments, models, images, and quantifications play in the formation of a theory, and the constitution and illustration of a scientific fact. • are able to actively engage in a critical discussion about scientific concepts, methods and approaches in the field of biomedical research and philosophy of science. • are able to critically evaluate the basic scientific assumptions, concepts and approaches underlying their own research project. • have learned how to “closely read” and analyse a scientific paper and are able to present their paper analysis to an audience that is not expert in the research field. | ||||
Inhalt | This course is part of the ETH "Critical Thinking" initiative. | ||||
Voraussetzungen / Besonderes | The course is best suited for students who have recently performed a research project of their own. Students will be asked to submit a short description of their research project before the course (1). This description will serve as a basis for individual critical reflections and for discussions with other students on the scientific assumptions, concepts and approaches underlying the research project (2). Students will also perform close reading and analyses of selected scientific research papers which they will present to and discuss with their peers (3). All students will be actively involved in interdisciplinary discussions with the lecturers in philosophy of science and with the scientific experts (4). All these elements (1-4) are required for successful completion of the course. |