Difference between revisions of "Scope of Scientonomy - Individual and Social"

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|Parent Topic=Scope of Scientonomy
 
|Parent Topic=Scope of Scientonomy
 
|Description=On the one hand, there are the changes in the belief systems of an ''individual'' scientist. On the other hand, there are the changes in the mosaic of a ''community'' of scientists. The question is: which of these two processes should a scientonomic theory trace and explain? Should a scientonomic theory concern itself only with individual scientists, only with communities, or both?
 
|Description=On the one hand, there are the changes in the belief systems of an ''individual'' scientist. On the other hand, there are the changes in the mosaic of a ''community'' of scientists. The question is: which of these two processes should a scientonomic theory trace and explain? Should a scientonomic theory concern itself only with individual scientists, only with communities, or both?
|Year Formulated=2015
+
|Formulated Year=2015
 
|Author=Hakob Barseghyan,
 
|Author=Hakob Barseghyan,
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 10:00, 28 August 2016

References

  1. ^  Popper, Karl. (2002) The Logic of Scientific Discovery. Routledge.
  2. ^  Longino, Helen. (2015) The Social Dimensions of Scientific Knowledge. In Zalta (Ed.) (2016). Retrieved from http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2016/entries/scientific-knowledge-social/.
  3. a b c  Kuhn, Thomas. (1962) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. University of Chicago Press.
  4. ^  Geison, Gerald and Farley, John. (1974) Science, politics and spontaneous generation in nineteenth-century France: the Pasteur-Pouchet debate. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 48 (2), 161-98. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/4617616/.
  5. a b  Longino, Helen. (1990) Science as Social Knowledge: Values and Objectivity in Scientific Inquiry. Princeton University Press.