Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £23.46 GBP
Regular price £24.99 GBP Sale price £23.46 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Kuhn's Intellectual Path
Charting The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

Examines the influences on and impact of Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.

K. Brad Wray (Author)

9781009060844, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 24 August 2023

245 pages
27 x 18 x 1.7 cm, 0.418 kg

'Wray has provided an important contribution both to the historical understanding of Kuhn's philosophy of science and to the understanding of the historical development of relations between philosophy and sociology of science in particular. The monograph may also prompt new conversa-tions about what different communities at different times have perceived as history and philosophy of science, and how we understand the emergence and development of crossover communities such as HOPOS or &HPS.' Hanne Andersen, Metascience

Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions offers an insightful and engaging theory of science that speaks to scholars across many disciplines. Though initially widely misunderstood, it had a profound impact on the way intellectuals and educated laypeople thought about science. K. Brad Wray traces the influences on Kuhn as he wrote Structure, including his 'Aristotle epiphany', his interactions, and his studies of the history of chemistry. Wray then considers the impact of Structure on the social sciences, on the history of science, and on the philosophy of science, where the problem of theory change has set the terms of contemporary realism/anti-realism debates. He examines Kuhn's frustrations with the Strong Programme sociologists' appropriations of his views, and debunks several popular claims about what influenced Kuhn as he wrote Structure. His book is a rich and comprehensive assessment of one of the most influential works in the modern sciences.

Introduction
Part I. The Groundwork for Structure: Harvard 1947 to 1955: 1. What did Aristotle Teach Kuhn?
2. The Influence of James B. Conant
3. Kuhn and the History of Chemistry
4. Kuhn and the Logical Positivists
Part II. The Unexpected Uptake: Kuhn and the Social Sciences: 5. Kuhn's Influence on the Social Sciences
6. The Elephant in the Room: The Sociology of Scientific Knowledge
Part III. Kuhn and the History of Science
7. Copenhagen, 1962-1963: A Return to the History of Science
8. Structure, Historicism and the History of Science
Part IV. Kuhn's Philosophical Legacy: 9. Squeals of Outrage from Philosophers
10. Kuhn and the Contemporary Realism/Anti-realism Debates
11. Kuhn's Career, Post-Structure.

Subject Areas: Philosophy: logic [HPL], Philosophy: metaphysics & ontology [HPJ], Philosophy [HP], Humanities [H]

View full details