Visible to the public Practicing a Science of Security: A Philosophy of Science PerspectiveConflict Detection Enabled

TitlePracticing a Science of Security: A Philosophy of Science Perspective
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsSpring, Jonathan M., Moore, Tyler, Pym, David
Conference NameProceedings of the 2017 New Security Paradigms Workshop
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Conference LocationSanta Cruz, CA, USA
ISBN Number9781450363846
Keywordscybersecurity, ethics of security, history of science, philosophy of science, science of security, security research
Abstract

Our goal is to refocus the question about cybersecurity research from 'is this process scientific' to 'why is this scientific process producing unsatisfactory results'. We focus on five common complaints that claim cybersecurity is not or cannot be scientific. Many of these complaints presume views associated with the philosophical school known as Logical Empiricism that more recent scholarship has largely modified or rejected. Modern philosophy of science, supported by mathematical modeling methods, provides constructive resources to mitigate all purported challenges to a science of security. Therefore, we argue the community currently practices a science of cybersecurity. A philosophy of science perspective suggests the following form of practice: structured observation to seek intelligible explanations of phenomena, evaluating explanations in many ways, with specialized fields (including engineering and forensics) constraining explanations within their own expertise, inter-translating where necessary. A natural question to pursue in future work is how collecting, evaluating, and analyzing evidence for such explanations is different in security than other sciences.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1145/3171533.3171540
DOI10.1145/3171533.3171540
Citation Key10.1145/3171533.3171540

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