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Relativism in the Philosophy of Science

This Element discusses the idea that scientific knowledge is relative to historical context and shaped by social-political factors.

Martin Kusch (Author)

9781108969611, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 28 January 2021

75 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 0.5 cm, 0.14 kg

'The book is written clearly, it is comprehensible for non-experts and, on top of that, Kusch provides interesting perspectives for experts.' Markus Seidel, Metascience

'Relativism versus absolutism' is one of the fundamental oppositions that have dominated reflections about science for much of its (modern) history. Often these reflections have been inseparable from wider social-political concerns regarding the position of science in society. Where does this debate stand in the philosophy and sociology of science today? And how does the 'relativism question' relate to current concerns with 'post truth' politics? In Relativism in the Philosophy of Science, Martin Kusch examines some of the most influential relativist proposals of the last fifty years, and the controversies they have triggered. He argues that defensible forms of relativism all deny that any sense can be made of a scientific result being absolutely true or justified, and that they all reject 'anything goes' – that is the thought that all scientific results are epistemically on a par. Kusch concludes by distinguishing between defensible forms of relativism and post-truth thinking.

1. Introduction
2. What is relativism?
3. Kuhn, Feyerabend, perspectivism, pluralism
4. Epistemic voluntarism and relativism
5. Relativism in the sociology of scientific knowledge
6. Relativism and post-truth.

Subject Areas: Philosophy of science [PDA], Philosophy: epistemology & theory of knowledge [HPK], Philosophy [HP]

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