Scientific Progress
A Study Concerning the Nature of the Relation Between Successive Scientific Theories (Fourth Edition)
(Sprache: Englisch)
From reviews of the previous editions:
"One of the most interesting contemporary approaches to questions related to the dynamics of science." (Revista de filosofia)
"An insightful and original work." (Risto Hilpinen, University of Miami)
"Free of...
"One of the most interesting contemporary approaches to questions related to the dynamics of science." (Revista de filosofia)
"An insightful and original work." (Risto Hilpinen, University of Miami)
"Free of...
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From reviews of the previous editions:
"One of the most interesting contemporary approaches to questions related to the dynamics of science." (Revista de filosofia)
"An insightful and original work." (Risto Hilpinen, University of Miami)
"Free of unnecessary ballast, and written with didactical aptitude, this book gives a complete overview of how the different views of scientific progress have developed since the time of the Vienna Circle. It is a suitable introduction to a complex period in contemporary theory of knowledge. In later chapters the author presents his own standpoint, so that the work can also be used as a source of new impulses in this direction ... The author convincingly works out how from his point of view it is possible to explain the conflict between two theories as an incompatibility of perspectives, and at the same time avoid sliding into relativism by giving criteria for scientific progress ... I hope that my all too brief remarks will encourage the reader - and especially the interested non-specialist - to read this book." (Dialectica)
"Clear, interesting, and historiographically sensitive." (Isis)
"The topic is an exceptionally difficult, but extremely important one. Most of Dilworth's discussion is clear, well-written and technically flawless. Complemented by the right materials it should serve as a useful text for graduate and advanced undergraduate study." (British Journal for the Philosophy of Science)
"Dilworth's work is clear and suggestive. The basic theses are presented with elegant philosophical sobriety, and the work as a whole can be called scientific not only for its subject matter, but also for its method." (Investigacion y Ciencia)
"This work must be considered as one of the most significant contributions to appear in the present debate concerning the problem of scientific change and scientific progress." (Evandro Agazzi, University of Fribourg)
"The book will quickly recommend itself, and reward the reader." (Aslib)
"[The book] gives valuable instruction designed to keep one abreast of developments in philosophical reasoning." (Methodology and Science)
"This study differs from the stance commonly taken by epistemologists. The author has, for natural reasons, begun with the present state of the subject
he moves by degrees however to a position which is not only theoretically original, but which brings to a discussion that has become asphyxiated the oxygen necessary for it to regain its original epistemological content." (Epistemologia)
"This book provides an extremely clear description and critique of the best known contemporary versions of philosophy of science, and a very suggestive ... solution of the general problem of scientific progress." (Annals of Science)
"The views discussed are carefully referenced and traced back to original sources. In this respect the work is especially useful to anyone interested in general problems in the philosophy of science." (Choice)
"One of the most interesting contemporary approaches to questions related to the dynamics of science." (Revista de filosofia)
"An insightful and original work." (Risto Hilpinen, University of Miami)
"Free of unnecessary ballast, and written with didactical aptitude, this book gives a complete overview of how the different views of scientific progress have developed since the time of the Vienna Circle. It is a suitable introduction to a complex period in contemporary theory of knowledge. In later chapters the author presents his own standpoint, so that the work can also be used as a source of new impulses in this direction ... The author convincingly works out how from his point of view it is possible to explain the conflict between two theories as an incompatibility of perspectives, and at the same time avoid sliding into relativism by giving criteria for scientific progress ... I hope that my all too brief remarks will encourage the reader - and especially the interested non-specialist - to read this book." (Dialectica)
"Clear, interesting, and historiographically sensitive." (Isis)
"The topic is an exceptionally difficult, but extremely important one. Most of Dilworth's discussion is clear, well-written and technically flawless. Complemented by the right materials it should serve as a useful text for graduate and advanced undergraduate study." (British Journal for the Philosophy of Science)
"Dilworth's work is clear and suggestive. The basic theses are presented with elegant philosophical sobriety, and the work as a whole can be called scientific not only for its subject matter, but also for its method." (Investigacion y Ciencia)
"This work must be considered as one of the most significant contributions to appear in the present debate concerning the problem of scientific change and scientific progress." (Evandro Agazzi, University of Fribourg)
"The book will quickly recommend itself, and reward the reader." (Aslib)
"[The book] gives valuable instruction designed to keep one abreast of developments in philosophical reasoning." (Methodology and Science)
"This study differs from the stance commonly taken by epistemologists. The author has, for natural reasons, begun with the present state of the subject
he moves by degrees however to a position which is not only theoretically original, but which brings to a discussion that has become asphyxiated the oxygen necessary for it to regain its original epistemological content." (Epistemologia)
"This book provides an extremely clear description and critique of the best known contemporary versions of philosophy of science, and a very suggestive ... solution of the general problem of scientific progress." (Annals of Science)
"The views discussed are carefully referenced and traced back to original sources. In this respect the work is especially useful to anyone interested in general problems in the philosophy of science." (Choice)
Klappentext zu „Scientific Progress “
Kuhn and Feyerabend formulated the problem, Dilworth provides the solution. In the fourth edition of this highly original book, Craig Dilworth answers the questions raised by the incommensurability thesis. Logical empiricism cannot account for theory conflict. Popperianism cannot account for how one theory is a progression beyond another. Dilworth's Perspectivist conception of science covers both bases with a concept of scientific progress based on both rationalism and empiricism.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Scientific Progress “
Acknowledgments.- Preface to the Second Edition.- Preface to the Third Edition.- Preface to the Fourth Edition.- Introduction.- 1. The Deductive Model.- 2. The Basis of the Logical Empiricist Conception of Science.- 3. The Basis of the Popperian Conception of Science.- 4. The Logical Empiricist Conception of Scientific Progress.- 5. The Popperian Conception of Scientific Progress.- 6. Popper, Lakatos, and the Transcendence of the Deductive Model.- 7. Kuhn, Feyerabend, and Incommensurability.- 8. The Gestalt Model.- 9. The Perspectivist Conception of Science.- 10. Development of the Perspectivist Conception in the Context of the Kinetic Theory of Gases.- 11. The Set-Theoretic Conception of Science.- 12. Application of the Perspectivist Conception to the Views of Newton, Kepler and Galileo.- Appendices.- I. On Theoretical Terms.- II. Reply to Criticism of the First Edition.- III. Perspectivism and Subatomic Physics.- IV. On the Nature of Scientific Laws and Theories.- V. Is the Transition from Absolute to Relative Space a Shift of Conceptual Perspective?- VI. Two Perspectives on Sustainable Development.- VII. Modern Science and the Distinction between Primary and Secondary Qualities.- VIII. A Theory of Identity and Reference.- References.- Index.
Autoren-Porträt von Craig Dilworth
Craig Dilworth, born and raised in Canada, received his PhD in Sweden in 1981. He is presently Reader in Theoretical Philosophy at Uppsala University. While he is fundamentally a philosopher, Dilworth is at the same time a true generalist. He has been engaged in a wide variety of environmental projects on the local level, while at the same time developing his intellectual interests in the philosophy of science, human ecology, theoretical physics, theoretical biology, and the social sciences. He is the author of two major works in the philosophy of science, Scientific Progress and The Metaphysics of Science, and an earlier book in environmental science, Sustainable Development and Decision Making. He has spent the past 15 years researching the present book.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Craig Dilworth
- 2008, 4. Aufl., 306 Seiten, Maße: 15,5 x 23,4 cm, Gebunden, Englisch
- Verlag: Springer Netherlands
- ISBN-10: 1402063539
- ISBN-13: 9781402063534
Sprache:
Englisch
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