Fleck (1935a)

From Encyclopedia of Scientonomy
Revision as of 04:47, 29 November 2016 by Hakob Barseghyan (talk | contribs) (Hakob Barseghyan moved page Scientific Observation and Perception in General to Fleck (1935) without leaving a redirect: Wrong citation key format)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Fleck, Ludwik. (1935) Scientific Observation and Perception in General. In Cohen and Schnelle (Eds.) (1986), 59-78.

Title Scientific Observation and Perception in General
Resource Type collection article
Author(s) Ludwik Fleck
Year 1935
Collection Cohen and Schnelle (Eds.) (1986)
Pages 59-78

Abstract

Until quite lately the following conviction prevailed among scientists, expressed in Poincaré’s sentence: “if a research worker had infinite time at his disposal, it would suffice to tell him: Look, but look well”. Our entire knowledge would allegedly emerge out of the description of his observations of all events.