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An Analysis of Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Hardcover)
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An Analysis of Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Hardcover)
Series: The Macat Library
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions can be seen,
without exaggeration, as a landmark text in intellectual history.
In his analysis of shifts in scientific thinking, Kuhn questioned
the prevailing view that science was an unbroken progression
towards the truth. Progress was actually made, he argued, via
"paradigm shifts", meaning that evidence that existing scientific
models are flawed slowly accumulates - in the face, at first, of
opposition and doubt - until it finally results in a crisis that
forces the development of a new model. This development, in turn,
produces a period of rapid change - "extraordinary science," Kuhn
terms it - before an eventual return to "normal science" begins the
process whereby the whole cycle eventually repeats itself. This
portrayal of science as the product of successive revolutions was
the product of rigorous but imaginative critical thinking. It was
at odds with science's self-image as a set of disciplines that
constantly evolve and progress via the process of building on
existing knowledge. Kuhn's highly creative re-imagining of that
image has proved enduringly influential - and is the direct product
of the author's ability to produce a novel explanation for existing
evidence and to redefine issues so as to see them in new ways.
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