Difference between revisions of "Scientific Change"
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== Current View == | == Current View == | ||
− | Currently, "scientific change" denotes to any change in a [[Scientific Mosaic|scientific mosaic]], be that a transition from one accepted theory to another or from one employed method to another. | + | Currently, "scientific change" denotes to any change in a [[Scientific Mosaic|scientific mosaic]], be that a transition from one accepted theory to another or from one employed method to another.[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)|p.6]] |
[[File:Scientific_Change_Definition.png|center|390px]] | [[File:Scientific_Change_Definition.png|center|390px]] |
Revision as of 02:57, 26 March 2016
Scientific change is defined as any change in a scientific mosaic, i.e. a transition from one accepted theory to another or from one employed method to another.
Prehistory
Prehistory here
History
Current View
Currently, "scientific change" denotes to any change in a scientific mosaic, be that a transition from one accepted theory to another or from one employed method to another.1
Open Questions
- This definition is problematic as it inadvertently qualifies every change in a mosaic as scientific. However, it is clear that not all changes in a mosaic are scientific; some changes might take place in violation of the laws of scientific change. By current definition, even the most outrageous cases of politically influenced changes in a mosaic (e.g. the Lysenko case) qualify as scientific. Now, how can the definition of "scientific change" be modified to exclude unscientific changes in a mosaic? In particular, how can it be accomplished without turning the laws of scientific change into tautologies?
Related Articles
Notes
References
- ^ Barseghyan, Hakob. (2015) The Laws of Scientific Change. Springer.