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Imre Lakatos (1922-1974) was a Hungarian philosopher who studied demarcation criteria and theory choice in science. Working alongside Karl Popper, Lakatos attempted to respond to the flaws he saw existing in Popperian and Kuhnian philosophy. Lakatos’ Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes (MSRP) is a holistic approach to demarcation criteria, which aims to explain theory choice in terms of acceptance, use, and pursuit by assessing if a particular research programme is progressive or degenerate. Lakatos later entered into a correspondence with Paul Feyerabend, with the goal of addressing Feyerabend’s objections to the MSRP. Due to Lakatos’ passing, some of Feyerabend’s objections were not successfully answered and remain open to this day.
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{{Author
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|First Name=Imre
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|Last Name=Lakatos
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|DOB Era=CE
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|DOB Year=1922
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|DOB Month=November
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|DOB Day=9
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|DOB Approximate=No
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|DOD Era=CE
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|DOD Year=1974
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|DOD Month=February
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|DOD Day=2
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|DOD Approximate=No
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|Brief=a Hungarian-born philosopher of science who greatly contributed to the problem of demarcation and theory choice in science
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|Summary=A protege of [[Karl Popper]], Lakatos attempted to respond to problems posed by the work of Popper and [[Thomas Kuhn|Kuhn]].[[CiteRef::Musgrave and Pigden (2016)]][[CiteRef::Chalmers (2013)]] His [[Lakatos (1970)|''Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes'']] (MSRP) offers a holistic approach to theory choice which extends beyond Popper's falsificationism.  It assesses a particular research program as progressive or degenerative, depending on its overall record of predictive and explanatory successes and failures. Lakatos later entered into a correspondence with [[Paul Feyerabend]], with the goal of addressing Feyerabend’s objections to the MSRP. He met an untimely death due to a heart attack at the age of 51. Some of Feyerabend’s objections remain challenging to this day.
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|Historical Context=Much of Lakatos's work was a response to the problems of [[Karl Popper]]’s '''falsificationism''', and was expressed in a series of publications between 1935 and the early 1970's. Lakatos rejected the idea that a false prediction was alone grounds for rejecting a theory. Most theories, he pointed out, are born in an “ocean of anomalies” and are therefore falsified from the moment of their inception. For example, Copernican heliocentric astronomy predicts that the stars should change in apparent position as the Earth revolves around the sun, but for three centuries after Copernicus proposed his theory, all attempts to detect this stellar parallax failed. Astronomers nevertheless accepted the theory on other grounds. The failure of Newtonian mechanics to account for the motions of the planet Mercury was known for many decades, during which the theory also wasn't rejected.[[CiteRef::Musgrave and Pigden (2016)]] A well known criticism of falsificationism, the [[Pierre Duhem|Duhem]]-Quine thesis,[[CiteRef::Stanford (2016)]][[CiteRef::Duhem (1962)]][[CiteRef::Quine (1951)]] which Lakatos championed, was that the failure of a prediction could be due to a problem anywhere in the network of theories and auxiliary assumptions responsible for that prediction. Lakatos thus argued that Popper's theory was overly restrictive and inconsistent with much of scientific practice. In scientific practice, Lakatos observed that if a theory is the best available of its kind, it is typically allowed to undergo modifications to account for all data and not rejected.
  
== Historical Context ==
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Lakatos also responded to Thomas Kuhn’s ''Structure of Scientific Revolutions'', published in 1962.[[CiteRef::Kuhn (1962a)]] He was troubled by Kuhn's '''incommensurability thesis''', which asserts that theories with different taxonomies cannot be rationally compared. Lakatos accused Kuhn of depicting the process of scientific change as completely irrational. If there truly existed a problem of incommensurability in science, then there would be no method to demarcate between science and pseudoscience, and no way of measuring scientific progress.[[CiteRef::Lakatos (1978a)]] At the same time, Lakatos and Kuhn's views of science have important points in common. Both rejected the positivist, inductivist accounts of science popular in the early twentieth century, and both emphasized the importance of theory over observationBoth agreed that any theory of how science works must make sense of the actual history of science.[[CiteRef::Chalmers (2013)|pp. 103-114]]
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
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|Major Contributions==== Lakatos on Theory Choice ===
Much of Lakatos’ work was geared towards resolving the flaws he saw existing within Popper’s theory of falsificationism. While Lakatos agreed that theories should be appraised in terms of their empirical content, he objected to the idea that a theory should be rejected once it has been falsified. He maintained that if falsificationism were true our theories must be conceived through the falsification of other theories. This means that theories are born in an “ocean of anomalies” and are therefore falsified from the moment of their conceptionThis can be better understood as asserting that if falsification alone is how we are supposed to select our theories, then any new theory only serves to of explain away the anomalies the previous theory could not. If a theory encounters an anomaly it cannot explain, the Popperian view would have scientists discard the theory in favour of a theory which accounts for this anomaly. For Lakatos, however, there is a sizeable difference between “falsification” and “rejection”, a difference which Popperian fablsificationism fails to address. If a theory is the best available theory of its kind, it should be allowed to undergo modifications to account for all the data and avoid rejection.
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Following the Duhem-Quine thesis, Lakatos recognized that scientific theories could not be appraised individually. Rather, all of the theoretical assumptions bearing on an experimental finding had to be assessed holistically, as parts of what he called a '''research program'''.[[CiteRef::Lakatos (1970)|pp. 31-55]]  While Kuhn supposed that, in a mature scientific discipline, only one paradigm generally existed at a time, Lakatos argued that it was generally the case that more than one research program existed in a field at any given time, and that large-scale processes of scientific change should be understood as competition between research programs.[[CiteRef::Godfrey-Smith (2003)|pp. 102-121]] Within a research program, not all theoretical assumptions are treated equally. The indispensable central theoretical assumptions of a research program are its '''hard core'''. Any modification of the hard core constitutes the abandonment of the research program and the creation of a new one. [[CiteRef::Chalmers (2013)|pp. 103-114]][[CiteRef::Lakatos (1970)|pp. 31-55]]
  
Lakatos also addressed problems he saw as existing in Thomas Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions. According to Kuhn’s incommensurability thesis, theories with different taxonomies cannot be compared. However Lakatos held that theories employing different taxonomies could be compared provided they be rationally reconstructed in a common, modern language. For example, the Phlogiston theory held that all combustible substances had within them a hypothetical substance known as “phlogiston”, which is understood today by modern chemistry as the presence of combustible elements such as hydrogen and oxygen. This serves to illustrate that a rejected theory in the history of science can be expressed in modern terms despite employing a different taxonomy. Lakatos accused Kuhn of depicting the process of scientific change as completely irrational. If there truly existed a problem of incommensurability in science, then there would be no method to demarcate between science and pseudoscience, and no way of measuring scientific progress.  
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Auxiliary propositions that are relevant to the hard core, but are not part of it form a '''protective belt'''. Adherents of a research program attempt to explain an increasingly wide range of relevant natural phenomena in terms of the core. In so doing, they add to the protective belt of auxiliary propositions. This expansion of the range of applicability of the program constitutes its '''positive heuristic'''. Scientists committed to a research program defend the hard core against change by using their ingenuity as needed to make alterations to the protective belt of auxiliary propositions to explain phenomena and avoid falsification of the core. This protection of the hard core is a research program's '''negative heuristic'''.[[CiteRef::Lakatos (1970)|pp. 47-51]]
</div>
 
  
== Main Contributions to the Philosophy of Scientific Change ==
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For example, the hard core of the Newtonian physics research program would consist of Newton's three laws of motion and Law of Universal Gravitation. The protective belt would include propositions such as "the Earth is an oblate spheroid" or "Neptune is 17 times more massive than Earth". In the nineteenth century, astronomers could not explain the movements of the planet Uranus using Newton's theory and known gravitational influences. Rather than modifying the theory itself, which would have obviated the Newtonian research program, they modified the protective belt by positing the existence of a new planet, whose Newtonian gravitational influence was affecting Uranus. The prediction was a stunning success, as the new planet, to be named Neptune, was discovered in 1846.[[CiteRef::Chalmers (2013)|pp. 103-114]][[CiteRef::Lakatos (1970)|pp. 31-48]]
  
'''Lakatos on Theory Choice'''
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If any evidence is found against a theory, and if the theory otherwise possesses both greater heuristic and explanatory powers than known alternatives, Lakatos supposed that falsification should be averted by modifying the research program's protective belt. There thus can be no 'crucial experiments'; a research program cannot be instantly overthrown by a single experimental finding taken in isolation.
  
Lakatos believed that scientific theories could not and should not be appraised on an individual basis. Rather, a theory should be appraised holistically and should not only consider a theory’s current state, but also its track-record. Lakatos developed the notion of research programmes to explain this idea. A research programme is broken into two parts: its “hard core” and its “protective belt”. The “hard core” of a research programme is comprised of the indispensable propositions of a research programme which are immune to change; any variation to the “hard core” of a research programme would result in the creation of a different research programme. The “protective belt” is comprised of the auxiliary propositions which can be subject to modification to guard against falsification and allow for the explanation of anomalous phenomena. For example, the “hard core” of the Newtonian Physics research programme would contain Newton’s 1st, 2nd and 3rd laws as well as the law of gravity, while its protective belt would consist of such things as: “there are 7 planets in the solar system”, Atmospheric Refraction Theory, or “Planets are spinning spheroids”.
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Lakatos held that a research program should be evaluated in terms of both its explanatory power; its ability to explain known phenomena, and its heuristic power; its ability to successfully explain newly discovered phenomena or to predict their existence.  
Lakatos held that a research programme should be chosen for both its “explanatory power” and its “heuristic power”. That is to say that a theory is accepted for its ability to both explain past and present phenomena, as well as its ability to be applied to and posit the existence of future phenomena and anomalies. Given any disproving instance of a theory, if the theory possesses both greater heuristic and explanatory powers than its counterparts, its protective belt should be allowed to undergo modifications to save itself from falsification. These modifications should be “progressive” and intended to save the research programme from degenerating. This for Lakatos represents the difference between falsification and rejection.
 
A research programme is considered “progressive” if it can make predictions later confirmed by experiment, much in line with the Popperian notion of “novel predictions”.  On the other hand, if a theory fails to offer such predictions and merely attempts to “save” itself from a disproving instance, it is considered “degenerate”. Lakatos established the following criteria for appraising modifications:
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
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Lakatos stipulated that a modification is '''progressive''' if ''all'' of the following conditions are met:[[CiteRef::Lakatos (1970)|pp. 31-34]]
|-
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# the modification has some excess empirical content, i.e. it increases the overall empirical content of a research programme (by making novel predictions or increasing their precision and accuracy);
! Progressive Modifications !! Degenerative Modifications
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# some of this excess empirical content has been corroborated in experiments and observations;
|-
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# the modification is in organic unity with the rest of the programme.  
| Increase the empirical content of a research programme by making predictions and increasing its precision || Do not increase the empirical content, make predictions or increase the precision of a programme (ad hoc 1)
 
|-
 
| Add excess empirical content which has been corroborated though experiments and observation || Introduce excess content, but fail to corroborate the excess content (ad hoc 2)
 
|-
 
| Are in organic unity with the rest of the programme || Are not in organic unity with the rest of the programme (ad hoc 3)
 
|}
 
 
The term organic unity is intended to mean that modifications should be contiguous with the rest of the programme. If the research programme is “natural selection”, a modification which adds the proposition “extra-terrestrial beings intervened with human evolution” would not be contiguous – not in organic unity with the rest of the research programme and is therefore ad hoc3.

 
Given any modification to a research programme’s protective belt, any research programme P1 would subsequently become P2. In this way we can track changes to research programme P from P1 to Pn and retrospectively ascertain if the modifications made have been progressive or degenerate. However, just because a research programme is degenerating, doesn’t mean that it should necessarily be dismissed. Rather, given two research programmes A and B, where programme A has been degenerating and programme B has been progressing, Lakatos suggests that the scientific community should invest most of its resources into A, but not all. This is because there have been instance where a degenerate programme has become progressive, such as heliocentrism and atomism. According to Lakatos, working on a degenerate programme is not prohibited, but it is irrational given that it has ceased to bear fruit.
 
  
'''Lakatos on Demarcation Criteria'''
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Thus, according to Lakatos, there are three types of regressive (''ad hoc'') modifications. A modification is '''regressive''' if at least one of the following obtains:[[CiteRef::Lakatos (1971a)|pp. 112, n. 2]]
 +
# it does not increase the empirical content of the programme, i.e. it doesn't make novel predictions or increase their precision/accuracy (''ad hoc<sub>1</sub>'');
 +
# it introduces excess empirical content, but fails to corroborate any of this excess content empirically (''ad hoc<sub>2</sub>'');
 +
# it is not in organic unity with the rest of the programme (''ad hoc<sub>3</sub>'').
  
The demarcation between “progressive” and “degenerate” research programmes also serves to demarcate between science and pseudoscience. A scientific theory should not only explain past and present phenomena; it should also have the ability to be applied to and posit the existence of future phenomena. For example, proving that an object falls in an experiment does not make the Newtonian research programme scientific. However, the Newtonian research programme predicted that comets move in either hyperbolas, parabolas or ellipses (contrary to the contemporary theory that they move in straights lines). Using this hypothesis, Edmond Halley successfully predicted the return of Halley’s comet to the minute. Such predictions affirm that the Newtonian research programme was progressive and, therefore, scientific. On the other hand, a research programme such as astrology which merely provide post hoc explanations and is subject to ad hoc modifications are considered pseudoscientific.
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The term ''organic unity'' is intended to mean that modifications should be contiguous with the rest of the program. For instance, if the research program is Darwin's theory of natural selection, a modification which adds the proposition "extra-terrestrial beings intervened with human evolution" would not be contiguous – not in organic unity – with the rest of the research program, and therefore regressive.
  
== Criticisms & New Directions ==
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Given any modification to a research programme’s protective belt, any research programme P1 would subsequently become P2. In this way we can track changes to research programme P from P1 to Pn and retrospectively ascertain if the modifications made have been progressive or degenerative. However, the degeneration of a research program doesn't necessitate its dismissal. Rather, given research programmes A and B, where programme A has been degenerating and programme B has been progressing, Lakatos suggests that the scientific community should invest most of its resources into A. The community should not invest all resources into A because there have been instances where a degenerative programme has become progressive, such as heliocentrism and atomism. According to Lakatos, working on a degenerative programme is not prohibited, but it is irrational given that it has ceased to bear fruit.
Paul Feyerabend pointed out that there exists a serious problem in how one can justify working on a degenerating programme. Lakatos’ response to this was ambiguous. While it is irrational to work on a degenerating programme, he held that it was not prohibited. Just because a research programme is degenerating does not mean that it should be rejected. Feyerabend objection, however, remains open, since Lakatos failed to provide anything more than stipulation.
 
Feyerabend also argued that a problem exists with the notion of a time limit. If a research programme has been degenerating for some time, how do we know when to abandon it? Heliocentrism and atomism had degenerated for well over a millennium before being reinvigorated and subsequently accepted. On the other hand, fields such as homeopathy or psychoanalysis, which are nascent in comparison to the aforementioned theories, are easily ascribed the title of pseudoscience. Lakatos’ response was that there is no discernable time limit; but once again, to this fails to address the problem.
 
  
== Related Articles ==
+
=== Lakatos on Demarcation Criteria ===
 +
The demarcation between "progressive" and "degenerative" research programmes also serves to demarcate between science and pseudoscience. A scientific theory should not only explain past and present phenomena; it should also have the ability to be applied to and posit the existence of future phenomena. For example, proving that an object falls in an experiment does not make the Newtonian research programme scientific. However, the Newtonian research programme predicted that comets move in either hyperbolas, parabolas or ellipses (contrary to the contemporary theory that they move in straights lines). Using this hypothesis, Edmond Halley successfully predicted the return of Halley’s comet to the minute. Such predictions affirm that the Newtonian research programme was progressive and, therefore, scientific. On the other hand, a research programme such as astrology, which merely provides ''post hoc'' explanations and is subject to ''ad hoc'' modifications, is considered pseudoscientific.
 +
|Criticism=Paul Feyerabend pointed out that there exists a serious problem in how one can justify working on a degenerating programme. Lakatos’ response to Feyerabend's criticism was ambiguous. While it is irrational to work on a degenerating programme, Lakatos held that it was not prohibited. Just because a research programme is degenerating does not mean that it should be rejected. Feyerabend's objection, however, remains open because Lakatos failed to provide anything more than stipulation.
  
== Notes ==
+
Feyerabend also argued that a problem exists with the notion of a time limit. If a research programme has been degenerating for some time, how do we know when to abandon it? Heliocentrism and atomism had degenerated for well over a millennium before being reinvigorated and subsequently accepted. On the other hand, fields such as homeopathy or psychoanalysis, which are nascent in comparison to the aforementioned theories, are easily ascribed the title of pseudoscience. Lakatos’ response was that there is no discernable time limit; but once again, he failed to address the actual problem.
 
+
|Related Topics=Mechanism of Scientific Change,
== Authors ==
+
|Page Status=Editor Approved
Jacob MacKinnon, 2015
+
}}

Latest revision as of 15:27, 7 September 2017

Imre Lakatos (9 November 1922 – 2 February 1974) was a Hungarian-born philosopher of science who greatly contributed to the problem of demarcation and theory choice in science. A protege of Karl Popper, Lakatos attempted to respond to problems posed by the work of Popper and Kuhn.12 His Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes (MSRP) offers a holistic approach to theory choice which extends beyond Popper's falsificationism. It assesses a particular research program as progressive or degenerative, depending on its overall record of predictive and explanatory successes and failures. Lakatos later entered into a correspondence with Paul Feyerabend, with the goal of addressing Feyerabend’s objections to the MSRP. He met an untimely death due to a heart attack at the age of 51. Some of Feyerabend’s objections remain challenging to this day.

Historical Context

Much of Lakatos's work was a response to the problems of Karl Popper’s falsificationism, and was expressed in a series of publications between 1935 and the early 1970's. Lakatos rejected the idea that a false prediction was alone grounds for rejecting a theory. Most theories, he pointed out, are born in an “ocean of anomalies” and are therefore falsified from the moment of their inception. For example, Copernican heliocentric astronomy predicts that the stars should change in apparent position as the Earth revolves around the sun, but for three centuries after Copernicus proposed his theory, all attempts to detect this stellar parallax failed. Astronomers nevertheless accepted the theory on other grounds. The failure of Newtonian mechanics to account for the motions of the planet Mercury was known for many decades, during which the theory also wasn't rejected.1 A well known criticism of falsificationism, the Duhem-Quine thesis,345 which Lakatos championed, was that the failure of a prediction could be due to a problem anywhere in the network of theories and auxiliary assumptions responsible for that prediction. Lakatos thus argued that Popper's theory was overly restrictive and inconsistent with much of scientific practice. In scientific practice, Lakatos observed that if a theory is the best available of its kind, it is typically allowed to undergo modifications to account for all data and not rejected.

Lakatos also responded to Thomas Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions, published in 1962.6 He was troubled by Kuhn's incommensurability thesis, which asserts that theories with different taxonomies cannot be rationally compared. Lakatos accused Kuhn of depicting the process of scientific change as completely irrational. If there truly existed a problem of incommensurability in science, then there would be no method to demarcate between science and pseudoscience, and no way of measuring scientific progress.7 At the same time, Lakatos and Kuhn's views of science have important points in common. Both rejected the positivist, inductivist accounts of science popular in the early twentieth century, and both emphasized the importance of theory over observation. Both agreed that any theory of how science works must make sense of the actual history of science.2pp. 103-114

Major Contributions

Lakatos on Theory Choice

Following the Duhem-Quine thesis, Lakatos recognized that scientific theories could not be appraised individually. Rather, all of the theoretical assumptions bearing on an experimental finding had to be assessed holistically, as parts of what he called a research program.8pp. 31-55 While Kuhn supposed that, in a mature scientific discipline, only one paradigm generally existed at a time, Lakatos argued that it was generally the case that more than one research program existed in a field at any given time, and that large-scale processes of scientific change should be understood as competition between research programs.9pp. 102-121 Within a research program, not all theoretical assumptions are treated equally. The indispensable central theoretical assumptions of a research program are its hard core. Any modification of the hard core constitutes the abandonment of the research program and the creation of a new one. 2pp. 103-1148pp. 31-55

Auxiliary propositions that are relevant to the hard core, but are not part of it form a protective belt. Adherents of a research program attempt to explain an increasingly wide range of relevant natural phenomena in terms of the core. In so doing, they add to the protective belt of auxiliary propositions. This expansion of the range of applicability of the program constitutes its positive heuristic. Scientists committed to a research program defend the hard core against change by using their ingenuity as needed to make alterations to the protective belt of auxiliary propositions to explain phenomena and avoid falsification of the core. This protection of the hard core is a research program's negative heuristic.8pp. 47-51

For example, the hard core of the Newtonian physics research program would consist of Newton's three laws of motion and Law of Universal Gravitation. The protective belt would include propositions such as "the Earth is an oblate spheroid" or "Neptune is 17 times more massive than Earth". In the nineteenth century, astronomers could not explain the movements of the planet Uranus using Newton's theory and known gravitational influences. Rather than modifying the theory itself, which would have obviated the Newtonian research program, they modified the protective belt by positing the existence of a new planet, whose Newtonian gravitational influence was affecting Uranus. The prediction was a stunning success, as the new planet, to be named Neptune, was discovered in 1846.2pp. 103-1148pp. 31-48

If any evidence is found against a theory, and if the theory otherwise possesses both greater heuristic and explanatory powers than known alternatives, Lakatos supposed that falsification should be averted by modifying the research program's protective belt. There thus can be no 'crucial experiments'; a research program cannot be instantly overthrown by a single experimental finding taken in isolation.

Lakatos held that a research program should be evaluated in terms of both its explanatory power; its ability to explain known phenomena, and its heuristic power; its ability to successfully explain newly discovered phenomena or to predict their existence.

Lakatos stipulated that a modification is progressive if all of the following conditions are met:8pp. 31-34

  1. the modification has some excess empirical content, i.e. it increases the overall empirical content of a research programme (by making novel predictions or increasing their precision and accuracy);
  2. some of this excess empirical content has been corroborated in experiments and observations;
  3. the modification is in organic unity with the rest of the programme.

Thus, according to Lakatos, there are three types of regressive (ad hoc) modifications. A modification is regressive if at least one of the following obtains:10pp. 112, n. 2

  1. it does not increase the empirical content of the programme, i.e. it doesn't make novel predictions or increase their precision/accuracy (ad hoc1);
  2. it introduces excess empirical content, but fails to corroborate any of this excess content empirically (ad hoc2);
  3. it is not in organic unity with the rest of the programme (ad hoc3).

The term organic unity is intended to mean that modifications should be contiguous with the rest of the program. For instance, if the research program is Darwin's theory of natural selection, a modification which adds the proposition "extra-terrestrial beings intervened with human evolution" would not be contiguous – not in organic unity – with the rest of the research program, and therefore regressive.

Given any modification to a research programme’s protective belt, any research programme P1 would subsequently become P2. In this way we can track changes to research programme P from P1 to Pn and retrospectively ascertain if the modifications made have been progressive or degenerative. However, the degeneration of a research program doesn't necessitate its dismissal. Rather, given research programmes A and B, where programme A has been degenerating and programme B has been progressing, Lakatos suggests that the scientific community should invest most of its resources into A. The community should not invest all resources into A because there have been instances where a degenerative programme has become progressive, such as heliocentrism and atomism. According to Lakatos, working on a degenerative programme is not prohibited, but it is irrational given that it has ceased to bear fruit.

Lakatos on Demarcation Criteria

The demarcation between "progressive" and "degenerative" research programmes also serves to demarcate between science and pseudoscience. A scientific theory should not only explain past and present phenomena; it should also have the ability to be applied to and posit the existence of future phenomena. For example, proving that an object falls in an experiment does not make the Newtonian research programme scientific. However, the Newtonian research programme predicted that comets move in either hyperbolas, parabolas or ellipses (contrary to the contemporary theory that they move in straights lines). Using this hypothesis, Edmond Halley successfully predicted the return of Halley’s comet to the minute. Such predictions affirm that the Newtonian research programme was progressive and, therefore, scientific. On the other hand, a research programme such as astrology, which merely provides post hoc explanations and is subject to ad hoc modifications, is considered pseudoscientific.

Criticism

Paul Feyerabend pointed out that there exists a serious problem in how one can justify working on a degenerating programme. Lakatos’ response to Feyerabend's criticism was ambiguous. While it is irrational to work on a degenerating programme, Lakatos held that it was not prohibited. Just because a research programme is degenerating does not mean that it should be rejected. Feyerabend's objection, however, remains open because Lakatos failed to provide anything more than stipulation.

Feyerabend also argued that a problem exists with the notion of a time limit. If a research programme has been degenerating for some time, how do we know when to abandon it? Heliocentrism and atomism had degenerated for well over a millennium before being reinvigorated and subsequently accepted. On the other hand, fields such as homeopathy or psychoanalysis, which are nascent in comparison to the aforementioned theories, are easily ascribed the title of pseudoscience. Lakatos’ response was that there is no discernable time limit; but once again, he failed to address the actual problem.

Publications

Here are the works of Lakatos included in the bibliographic records of this encyclopedia:

  • Lakatos (1978a): Lakatos, Imre. (1978) Philosophical Papers: Volume 1. The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lakatos (1978b): Lakatos, Imre. (1978) Philosophical Papers: Volume 2. Mathematics, Science and Epistemology. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lakatos and Zahar (1976): Lakatos, Imre and Zahar, Elie. (1976) Why Did Copernicus's Research Programme Supersede Ptolemy's? In Lakatos (1978a), 168-192.
  • Lakatos (1976b): Lakatos, Imre. (1976) Understanding Toulmin. In Lakatos (1978b), 224-245.
  • Lakatos (1976a): Lakatos, Imre. (1976) Proofs and Refutations: The Logic of Mathematical Discovery. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lakatos (1974c): Lakatos, Imre. (1974) Anomalies Versus "Crucial Experiments". In Lakatos (1978b), 211-223.
  • Lakatos (1974b): Lakatos, Imre. (1974) The Role of Crucial Experiments in Science. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 4 (4), 309-325.
  • Lakatos (1974a): Lakatos, Imre. (1974) Popper on Demarcation Criteria and Induction. In Lakatos (1978a), 139-167.
  • Lakatos (1973): Lakatos, Imre. (1973) The Problem of Appraising Scientific Theories: Three Approaches. In Lakatos (1978b), 107-120.
  • Lakatos (1971b): Lakatos, Imre. (1971) Replies to Critics. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 8, 174-182.
  • Lakatos (1971a): Lakatos, Imre. (1971) History of Science and Its Rational Reconstructions. In Lakatos (1978a), 102-138.
  • Lakatos (1970): Lakatos, Imre. (1970) Falsification and the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. In Lakatos (1978a), 8-101.
  • Lakatos and Musgrave (Eds.) (1970): Lakatos, Imre and Musgrave, Alan. (Eds.). (1970) Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lakatos (1968a): Lakatos, Imre. (1968) Changes in the Problem of Inductive Logic. In Lakatos (1978b), 128-200.
  • Lakatos (1968b): Lakatos, Imre. (1968) Criticism and the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 69, 149-186.
  • Lakatos (Ed.) (1968): Lakatos, Imre. (Ed.). (1968) The Problem of Inductive Logic. North Holland Publishing Company.
  • Lakatos and Musgrave (Eds.) (1968): Lakatos, Imre and Musgrave, Alan. (Eds.). (1968) Problems in the Philosophy of Science. North Holland Pub. Co..
  • Lakatos (Ed.) (1967): Lakatos, Imre. (Ed.). (1967) Problems in the Philosophy of Mathematics. Amsterdam: North Holland.
  • Lakatos (1967): Lakatos, Imre. (1967) A Renaissance of Empiricism in the Recent Philosophy of Mathematics? In Lakatos (1978b), 24-42.
  • Lakatos (1963a): Lakatos, Imre. (1963) Proofs and Refutations (I). The British Journal of Philosophy of Science 14 (53), 1-25.
  • Lakatos (1963b): Lakatos, Imre. (1963) Newton's Effects on Scientific Standards. In Lakatos (1978a), 193-222.
  • Lakatos (1962): Lakatos, Imre. (1962) Infinite Regress and Foundations of Mathematics. In Lakatos (1978b), 3-23.
  • Goodstein and Lakatos (1962): Goodstein, Reuben Lewis and Lakatos, Imre. (1962) Symposium: The Foundations of Mathematics. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 36, 145-184.
  • Lakatos (1961): Lakatos, Imre. (1961) Essays in the Logic of Mathematical Discovery. University of Cambridge.

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References

  1. a b  Musgrave, Alan and Pigden, Charles. (2016) Imre Lakatos. In Zalta (Ed.) (2016). Retrieved from http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2016/entries/lakatos/.
  2. a b c d  Chalmers, Alan. (2013) What is This Thing Called Science? University of Queensland Press.
  3. ^  Stanford, Kyle. (2016) Underdetermination of Scientific Theory. In Zalta (Ed.) (2016). Retrieved from http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-underdetermination/.
  4. ^  Duhem, Pierre. (1962) The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory. Atheneum.
  5. ^  Quine, Willard van Orman. (1951) Two Dogmas of Empricism. In Quine (1953), 20-46.
  6. ^  Kuhn, Thomas. (1962) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. University of Chicago Press.
  7. ^  Lakatos, Imre. (1978) Philosophical Papers: Volume 1. The Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. Cambridge University Press.
  8. a b c d e  Lakatos, Imre. (1970) Falsification and the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes. In Lakatos (1978a), 8-101.
  9. ^  Godfrey-Smith, Peter. (2003) Theory and Reality. University of Chicago Press.
  10. ^  Lakatos, Imre. (1971) History of Science and Its Rational Reconstructions. In Lakatos (1978a), 102-138.