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Represent
The Revolution

Represent
The Revolution

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  • $35.00

    Classic tee in a tri blend heather gray fabric.  Mid weight with a little stretch. 

    GRAPHIC: BRKN Science

    FABRIC: Tri blend poly/cotton/rayon

  • $30.00

    Adjustable Snapback

    GRAPHIC: BROKEN

  • $56.00

    Women’s cut, garment-washed for softness and unique color.  Boxy fit with no drawstring.

    COLOR: Bone

    GRAPHIC: MetFix distressed Logo in Pink 

    FABRIC: Ring-spun cotton/polyester blend, 3-end fleece

  • $35.00

    Classic tee in a tri blend heather army green.  Mid weight with a little stretch. 

    GRAPHIC: Highway to Metabolic Dysfunction … CI/CO

    FABRIC: Tri blend poly/cotton/rayon

  • $35.00

    Classic tee in a tri blend heather blue fabric.  Mid weight with a little stretch. 

    GRAPHIC: Mc Science, I’m Breakin’ It 

    FABRIC: Tri blend poly/cotton/rayon

  • $62.00

    Heavyweight hoodie with fleeced interior in Slate Dark Blue.

    GRAPHIC: MetFix Metabolic Dept in White

    FABRIC: 80% cotton/20% polyester blend

     

  • $35.00

    Classic soft tee in Charcoal Black.  Mid weight with a little stretch. 

    GRAPHIC: P-Valuegram

    FABRIC: Tri blend poly/cotton/rayon

  • $62.00

    Pigment dyed Alpine Green, with white screen print.  Mid weight.  Whiteboard ready.

    GRAPHIC: MetFix Logo

    FABRIC: 80% cotton/20% polyester blend, fleeced interior

    *Pre-sale ships mid February*

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    In fewer than two-hundred pages, David Stove leaves the well-established and widely regarded edifice of the academic philosophy of science in smoldering ruins.

    This book provides a modern history of scientific reasoning, from David Hume’s inductive skepticism to Karl Popper’s outright denial of induction, to the increasingly irrational and absurd scientific views that followed. When Popper untethered science from induction, Stove argues, he triggered a postmodernist nightmare of utter nonsense culminating in Paul Feyerabend’s summation that “anything goes” when it comes to defining or describing science.

    With undeniable logic, a deft analysis of the linguistic slight-of-hand that make absurd arguments seem reasonable, and regular displays of wit, Stove gives the reader a front row seat to one of the greatest unforced errors in the history of modern thought.

    Stove’s views are entirely consistent with the origins of scientific inference and logic, as well as modern advances in probability theory, and yet he remains largely unnoticed by most of the academic world. From Stove’s insider-outsider perspective, the train wreck that is academically accepted philosophy of science and “science studies” is a fascinating and thoroughly entertaining subject of study.

    Scientific Irrationalism is the perfect place to begin any examination of what science is—and what it is not.