Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions is one of the most important books of the twentieth century. Its influence reaches far beyond the philosophy of science, and its key terms, such as “paradigm shift, ” “normal science, ” and “incommensurability, ” are now used in both academic and public discourse without any reference to Kuhn. However, Kuhn’s philosophy is still often misunderstood and underappreciated. In Kuhn’s Legacy, Bojana Mladenović offers a novel analysis of Kuhn’s central philosophical project, focusing on his writings after Structure.
Mladenović argues that Kuhn’s historicism was always coupled with a firm and consistent antirelativism but that it was only in his mature writings that Kuhn began to systematically develop an original account of scientific rationality. She reconstructs this account, arguing that Kuhn sees the rationality of science as a form of collective rationality. At the purely formal level, Kuhn’s conception of scientific rationality prohibits obviously irrational beliefs and choices and requires reason-responsiveness as well as the uninterrupted pursuit of inquiry. At the substantive, historicized level, it rests on a distinctly pragmatist mode of justification compatible with a notion of contingent but robust scientific progress. Mladenović argues that Kuhn’s epistemology and his metaphilosophy both represent a creative and fruitful continuation of the tradition of American pragmatism. Kuhn’s Legacy demonstrates the vitality of Kuhn’s philosophical project and its importance for the study of the philosophy and history of science today.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. An Overview of Kuhn’s Philosophy of Science
Part I: History
2. The Role of the History of Science in Kuhn’s Early Philosophy
3. “Muckraking” in History
Part II: Rationality
4. Kuhn’s Antirelativism
5. Collective Rationality of Science
6. Looking Back: Progress in Science
Part III: Pragmatism
7. Kuhn’s Pragmatist Roots
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor
Bojana Mladenović is professor of philosophy at Williams College. She is the editor of
Kuhn’s Last Writings (forthcoming), which includes Kuhn’s Shearman Memorial Lectures, ‚The Presence of Past Science, ‚ and his unfinished book,
The Plurality of Worlds: An Evolutionary Theory of Scientific Development.