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{{Community
|Summary=This '''scientonomic Scientonomy community''' was initially formed at the IHPST, University of Toronto around the time of the publication of Barseghyan's ''[[Barseghyan (2015)|The Laws of Scientific Change]]'' [[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)]] with the main goal of advancing our knowledge of scientific change in a piecemeal and transparent fashion and establishing a proper an empirical science of science, [[Scientonomy|''scientonomy'']]. The community publishes the [[Journal of Scientonomy]], edits the [[Main Page|Encyclopedia of Scientonomy]], runs organizes scientonomic [[Scientonomy Seminar|seminars ]] and [[Scientonomy Workshop|workshops]].|History=In the years preceding the publication of ''The Laws of Scientific Change''[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)]] (2012-2015), the community would mostly gather during winter [[Scientonomy Seminar|seminar sessions]]. In 2015, the community started working on the establishment of a new empirical study of science, [[Scientonomy]]. To that end, the community launched the first [[Main Page|Encyclopedia of Scientonomy]] early in 2016 with the aim of tracking the current state of communal knowledge concerning the process of scientific change, tracing and appraising the proposed modifications, as well as documenting open questions.
In 2015, {{#evt:service=youtube|id=P5nrMUVxzEE|alignment=right|urlargs=start=748|description=Hakob Barseghyan showcasing the community has started working on the establishment of a proper science of science, [[Scientonomy]]. workflow|container=frame }}
To that endIn September of 2016, the community launched the first [[Main Page|Encyclopedia Journal of Scientonomy]] early with the first issue published in 20162017. The aim An essential component of this encyclopedia is to track the current state of our knowledge on scientonomic workflow, the journal aims at publishing original research in the process of scientific change, trace field and appraise collecting all the proposed modifications, as well as to list all the open questions.
In September of 20162017-18, the community launched was testing and revising the [[Journal of Scientonomy]] which aims at publishing original research in new scientonomic workflow geared towards the field piecemeal and collecting all the proposed modificationstransparent advancement of our communal knowledge.
In 2019, the community organized its inaugural [https://scientoconference.com/conference2019/ conference] which featured [[Hasok Chang]], [[Jutta Schickore]], and [[Lee McIntyre]] as its keynotes. The community's general annual meeting is usually on proceedings of the first Friday of conference are published in 2022.[[CiteRef::Barseghyan et al. (Eds.) (2022)]]  In 2019 and 2020, the winter semester at community developed a diagrammatic notation for visualizing epistemic entities and relations. Various visualization techniques were developed into a systematic diagrammatic notation in May 2019, during the University ''Visualizing Worldviews'' project funded by ''Jackman Humanities Institute'' as part of Torontotheir ''Scholars-in-Residence'' program. TODO[[CiteRef:: embed videos Palider et al. (2021)]] In the May 2020 edition of the 2015 program, the notation was applied to high-profile present-day debates on intelligent design, gender, climate change, and 2016 race. The community holds its [https://youtu.be/71owGRMclu8?list=PLnOtdGODiXLQdrezPypM7o0JUVeNoxPVw annual meetings] in January or February. These annual meetingsare traditionally hosted by the University of Toronto's ''Faculty Club''.
==Road-map==
{{#evt:service=youtube|id=hQE-PdeGNY0|alignment=right|urlargs=start=748|description=Nicholas Overgaard outlines ''The Tree of Knowledge'' project|container=frame }} The ''roadmaproad-map'' of the community includes:* Organizing annual Refine the systematic ontology of scientific change that will be at the backbone of the database of intellectual history. A series of conferences and [[Scientonomy Workshop|workshops]] will be organized with the aim of discussing and those evaluating proposed modification which didn't yield a common verdictmodifications to the current ontology. * Launching a pilot [[Tree of Knowledge Project|tree of knowledge]] project to develop a the schema for a historical database, design a the respective user interfacewebsite, as well as to fill that pilot the database with some sample high-quality historical data to show how test the whole system can actually workplatform and showcase its potential to the broader community of historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science.* A Creating a full-fledged [[Tree of Knowledge Project|tree of knowledge]] website and a comprehensive historical database that would eventually include the theories document belief systems of diverse epistemic agents across time periods, field of inquiry, and methods of all historical mosaicsgeographic regions.|Notable Members=Ameer Sarwar, Gregory Rupik, Hakob Barseghyan, Gregory RupikJamie Shaw, Kye Palider, Mathew Mercuri, Mirka Loiselle, Nicholas Overgaard, Patrick Fraser, Paul Patton,William Rawleigh, Zoe Sebastien
|Historical Data Precision=Day
|Allow Approximate Dates=Yes
|Established Year=2015
|Still Exists=Yes
|Disbanded Year=
|Uses Modifications=Yes
|Acronym=Sciento
|Description=In the years preceding the publication of ''The Laws of Scientific Change''[[CiteRef::Barseghyan (2015)]] (2012-2015), the community would mostly gather during winter [[Scientonomy Seminar|seminar sessions]].
In 2015, the community has started working on the establishment of a proper science new empirical study of science, [[Scientonomy]].
To that end, the community launched the first [[Encyclopedia of Scientonomy]] early in 2016. The aim of this encyclopedia is to track the current state of our knowledge on the process of scientific change, trace and appraise all the proposed modifications, as well as to list all the open questions.

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