Critical Thinking for Scientists

February 19, 2024

Topic: academic skills
Provider: Graduierten-Akademie (GRADUS)

Time: February 19 – 26, 2024
  February 19, 2024, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
February 26, 2024, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Thomas Zoglauer (Studied mathematics, physics and philosophy; 1990 PhD at the University of Stuttgart; 1997 habilitation at the BTU Cottbus with the title "Normenkonflikte: Zur Logik und Rationalität ethischen Argumentierens". In his numerous publications, he impressively presents the basic ethical questions and problems of our time using vivid practical examples).
Event language: English
This continuing education course is aimed at : Doctoral researchers
CreditPoints: 1 credit point
Meeting mode: in presence
Venue: University of Stuttgart
Azenbergareal. The exact seminar location and all the necessary information will be announced one week before the workshop.
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How to avoid scientific fallacies.

Reasoning and logical inference are essential ingredients of scientific thinking and are important in engineering and the social sciences. Especially in causal and probabilistic reasoning are lurking fallacies, paradoxes, and other pitfalls. Psychological literature is full of examples of scientific fallacies, cognitive biases, and distorted risk perception. In this workshop we will learn how to avoid these fallacies. Participants will gain competence in logical thinking (de-ductive and inductive inference), the evaluation of causal and statistical arguments, rational choice theory, and risk assessment.

Learning results:

  • Competence in logical reasoning
  • Knowing how to draw conclusions from given premises
  • Ability to distinguish between valid and invalid inferences
  • Ability to distinguish between causation and correlation
  • Knowing how to use bayesianism as a tool for probabilistic reasoning
  • Knowing how to decide under risk and uncertainty

Main topics:

  • Deductive and inductive inference
  • Logical fallacies
  • Verificationism and falsificationism
  • Scientific reasoning according to Popper and Kuhn
  • Probabilistic reasoning
  • Bayesianism
  • The Monty Hall problem
  • The Simpson paradox
  • Causation and correlation
  • The common cause principle
  • Rational choice theory
  • The framing effect
  • The Ellsberg paradox
  • Risk assessment
  • Decision making under risk and uncertainty

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This image shows Tatsiana  Radziyeuskaya

Tatsiana Radziyeuskaya

 

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