Since the origin of the modern sciences, our views on discovery
and creativity had a remarkable history. Originally, discovery was
seen as an integral part of methodology and the logic of discovery
as algorithmic or nearly algorithmic. During the nineteenth
century, conceptions in line with romanticism led to the famous
opposition between the context of discovery and the context of
justification, culminating in a view that banned discovery from
methodology. The revival of the methodological investigation of
discovery, which started some thirty years ago, derived its major
impetus from historical and sociological studies of the sciences
and from developments within cognitive psychology and artificial
intelligence. Today, a large majority of philosophers of science
agrees that the classical conception as well as the romantic
conception are mistaken. Against the classical conception, it is
generally accepted that truly novel discoveries are not the result
of simply applying some standardized procedure. Against the
romantic conception, it is rejected that discoveries are produced
by unstructured flashes of insight.
An especially important result of the contemporary study
concerns the availability of (descriptive and normative) models for
explaining discoveries and creative processes. Descriptive models
mainly aim at explaining the origin of novel products; normative
models moreover address the question how rational researchers
should proceed when confronted with problems for which a standard
procedure is missing. The present book provides an overview of
these models and of the important changes they induced within
methodology. As appears from several papers, the methodological
study of discovery and creativity led to profound changes in our
conceptions of justification and acceptance, of rationality, of
scientific change, and of conceptual change. The book contains
contributions from both historians and philosophers of science. All
of them, however, are methodological in the contemporary sense of
the term. The central values of this methodology are empirical
accurateness, clarity and precision, and rationality. The different
contributions realize these values by their interdisciplinary
nature. Some philosophically oriented papers rely on historical
case studies and results from the cognitive sciences, others on
recent results from the computer sciences and/or non-standard
logics. The historically oriented papers address central
philosophical questions and hypotheses.
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