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Kuhn and Taxonomies of History

Kuhn and Taxonomies of History
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摘要 This paper introduces the idea that if theories of history generate different taxonomies of history they too are incommensurable. I argue this is unavoidable for Kuhn given what he says about incommensurability and 1 investigate the consequences in relation to reflexivity, justification, and paradox for Kuhn's account of science. I want to do this on two levels, firstly looking at different possibilities for characterising individual paradigms. I will look at some examples from ancient and early modem astronomy as here it is clearest that paradigms can be characterised in different ways and that this has important consequences. I will argue in particular that Kuhn's characterisation of the paradigm for astronomy which emerges from antiquity (geocentrism) is favourable to his general account of the history of science, but that there is a very plausible and extremely damaging alternative. I argue that these differing characterisations generate differing, incommensurable taxonomies of the history of astronomy, with attendant "local holism," untranslatability of key terms and issues of theory choice. If so, Kuhn then has problems with generating an adequate decision making protocol for choosing between the two paradigm characterisations. That is problematic in itself, but I also argue this problem is systemic and affects the evidence needed for Kuhn to justify his general account of the history of science. I also want to investigate the implications of differing taxonomies of the history of science at a more abstract level. Kuhn's general theory of the history of science generates a taxonomy of the history of science, as do other theories such as those of Popper and of gradualism. If so, the incommensurability involved here, again with attendant "local holism," untranslatability of key terms and issues of theory choice, leads to issues of paradox and justification for Kuhn's general account of the history of science. With this broader understanding of taxonomic issues, some important Kuhn statements about scientific theories become self-referential, again generating problems of paradox and justification.
机构地区 Ph.D.
出处 《Journal of Philosophy Study》 2013年第5期412-430,共19页 哲学研究(英文版)
关键词 Kuhn taxonomy POPPER INCOMMENSURABILITY "local holism theory choice Kuhn Cycle ASTRONOMY 分类法 库恩 历史 不可通约性 选择问题 科学史 分类问题 科学理论
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  • 1Throughout this paper I try to stick tightly to what Kuhn said about taxonomy and incommensurability. This paper can also be read more flexibly by substituting other ideas of taxonomy and incommensurability to see how they fare against this paper's critique. 2.
  • 2This paper does not defend Popperianism or gradualism but rather points to difficulties Kuhn has in justifying his account relative to them. 3.
  • 3I also want to point out that Kuhn's account of early astronomy in SSR is significantly flawed and that scholarship has moved on considerably since SSR was published. 4.
  • 4References to SSR are to the second edition. Some Kuhn papers are cited by their page numbers in The Road since Structure (RSS), others by their page numbers in The Essential Tension (ET). 5.
  • 5See, e.g., Neugebauer, 1957, 97ff; Pingree, 1992; Swerdlow, 1998; Hunger and Pingree, 6.
  • 6In addition to work cited in the previous note, see Steele, 1997, 133ff; 2005. 7.
  • 7This is more difficult and complex than it may seem as the moon has a five degree Babylonians did not have this explanatory model, so had to collect a great deal of data and predict the new moon. 1999; Rochberg, 2004; 2010 offset from the earth's orbit. The produce complex mathematics to 8.
  • 8Planets appear to reverse their motion across the night sky occasionally, this apparent effect being due to the relative motion of planets and earth. Again, the Babylonians did not have this explanatory model. They were interested in the point at which the planet stops it apparent progress before reversing and the point where it stops reversing to progress again. 9.
  • 9In our terms, Mercury and Venus orbit the sun and when their orbit takes them too close to the sun their reflected light is overwhelmed by the sun's light and they disappear from sight. 10.
  • 10Cf. Kuhn (1970b, 21): "Ever since prehistoric antiquity one field of study after another has crossed the divide betweenwhat the historian might call its prehistory as a science and its history proper." 11.

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