Scientific Knowledge and Its Social ProblemsOxford University Press, 1973 - 449 páginas Analyses the work of science as the creation and investigation of problems, and demonstrates the role of choice and value-judgement, and the inevitability of error, in scientific research. |
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Página 120
... argument will include subsidiary arguments on the strength of particular inferences , especially for those that have a crucial position in the structure . First , they cannot yield true and certain conclusions about the objects of ...
... argument will include subsidiary arguments on the strength of particular inferences , especially for those that have a crucial position in the structure . First , they cannot yield true and certain conclusions about the objects of ...
Página 121
... argument , providing a part of the basis for the conclusion . Hence this information in the argument is not a statement of the properties of the objects described in the conclusion ; rather it is evidence brought into the argument which ...
... argument , providing a part of the basis for the conclusion . Hence this information in the argument is not a statement of the properties of the objects described in the conclusion ; rather it is evidence brought into the argument which ...
Página 123
... argument will depend on the mode of its original production . For when it is cited , the argument by which it was derived is implicitly included in the argument of the new problem , as a subsidiary argument for its adequacy . Also its ...
... argument will depend on the mode of its original production . For when it is cited , the argument by which it was derived is implicitly included in the argument of the new problem , as a subsidiary argument for its adequacy . Also its ...
Índice
Introduction PART I THE VARIETIES OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERIENCE 1 What is Science? | 1 |
Social Problems of Industrialized Science | 33 |
31 | 56 |
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academic science achieved activity analysis applied argument aspects assessment basic become Boyle's Law caloric theory complex concept conceptual objects conclusions corruption craft knowledge criteria of adequacy derived Descartes discipline discussion effective established ethic evidence existing experience external world facts folk-science formal Francis Bacon function Galileo genuine goals Hence history of science human immature field intellectual property intellectually constructed investigation involved journals judgements London materials mathematical matured ment methods Michael Polanyi moral natural philosophy natural science objects of inquiry operation particular philosophy of science physics pitfalls political practical problems present prestige production quality control recognized relation relevant requires research report scientific inquiry scientific knowledge scientific problem scientists significant situation skills social society solution solved sophisticated sort standard style subtle successful task technical problems techniques testing theory things and events tion traditional University
Referencias a este libro
Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts Bruno Latour,Steve Woolgar No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 1986 |
What Is This Thing Called Science? (Third Edition) Alan F. Chalmers No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 1999 |