#fav on Twitter #ebm

| December 11th, 2016

#pol The New Progressivism

| December 11th, 2016

#fav on Twitter

| December 11th, 2016

#pic added to #med

| December 11th, 2016

#pic

| December 10th, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #philsci

| December 5th, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #philsci

| December 5th, 2016

#fav on Twitter

| December 3rd, 2016

#fav on Twitter

| December 3rd, 2016

#pic added to “#cod”

| December 3rd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #fav

| December 3rd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #fav

| December 3rd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #fav

| December 3rd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #fav

| December 3rd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #med

| December 2nd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #med

| December 2nd, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #med

| December 1st, 2016

#pic added to “#cod”

| December 1st, 2016

#pic added to “#cod”

| December 1st, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #pol

| November 30th, 2016

CoDoubt on Twitter #fav

| November 29th, 2016

Mankiw Econ class at Harvard.  Power point presentations.

Causation and inference in epidemiology. Core paper.

Instrumentalism is the methodological view in Epistemology and Philosophy of Science, advanced by the American philosopher John Dewey, that concepts and theories are merely useful instruments, and their worth is measured not by whether the concepts and theories are true or false (Instrumentalism denies that theories are truth-evaluable), or whether they correctly depict reality, but by how effective they are in explaining and predicting phenomena. It maintains that the truth of an idea is determined by its success in the active solution of a problem, and that the value of an idea is determined by its function in human experience.

Link: Instrumentalism – By Branch / Doctrine – The Basics of Philosophy

#pic added to “#cod”

| November 28th, 2016