enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Paradigm shift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradigm_shift

    However, Kuhn would not recognise such a paradigm shift. In the social sciences, people can still use earlier ideas to discuss the history of science. Philosophers and historians of science, including Kuhn himself, ultimately accepted a modified version of Kuhn's model, which synthesizes his original view with the gradualist model that preceded it.

  3. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Structure_of...

    Kuhn's insistence that a paradigm shift was a mélange of sociology, enthusiasm and scientific promise, but not a logically determinate procedure, caused an uproar in reaction to his work. Kuhn addressed concerns in the 1969 postscript to the second edition.

  4. Thomas Kuhn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Kuhn

    Thomas Samuel Kuhn (/ k uː n /; July 18, 1922 – June 17, 1996) was an American historian and philosopher of science whose 1962 book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions was influential in both academic and popular circles, introducing the term paradigm shift, which has since become an English-language idiom.

  5. The Copernican Revolution (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Copernican_Revolution...

    Before diving into a historical overview of the scientific understanding of the planets, stars and other celestial bodies, Kuhn prefaces the main ideas in The Copernican Revolution (in Chapter 1) by arguing that the story of the shift from a geocentric understanding of the universe to a heliocentric one offers a great deal of insight far beyond ...

  6. Kuhn–Popper debate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuhn–Popper_debate

    An example of a paradigm would be the geocentric model of the universe; an example of a paradigm shift would when the heliocentric model began taking over due to irrefutable evidence (largely from Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler, and Isaac Newton). In Kuhn's model, these three would be revolutionary scientists, because they changed the model.

  7. Critical juncture theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_juncture_theory

    Philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn's landmark work The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) [11] introduced and popularized the idea of discontinuous change and the long-term effects of discontinuous change. Kuhn argued that progress in knowledge occurs at times through sudden jumps, which he called paradigm shifts.

  8. History and philosophy of science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_and_philosophy_of...

    This attitude is also reflected in his historicist approach, as outlined in Kuhn's seminal Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962, 2nd ed. 1970), wherein philosophical questions about scientific theories and, especially, theory change are understood in historical terms, employing concepts such as paradigm shift. However, Kuhn was also ...

  9. Normal science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_science

    Kuhn stressed that historically, the route to normal science could be a difficult one. Prior to the formation of a shared paradigm or research consensus, would-be scientists were reduced to the accumulation of random facts and unverified observations, in the manner recorded by Pliny the Elder or Francis Bacon, [4] while simultaneously beginning the foundations of their field from scratch ...