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Monopolizing Knowledge por Ian Hutchinson
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Monopolizing Knowledge (edición 2011)

por Ian Hutchinson (Autor)

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Can real knowledge be found other than by science? In this unique approach to understanding today's culture wars, an MIT physicist answers emphatically yes. He shows how scientism--the view that science is all the real knowledge there is--suffocates reason as well as religion. Tracing the history of scientism and its frequent confusion with science, Hutchinson explains what makes modern science so persuasive and powerful, but restricts its scope. Recognizing science's limitations, and properly identifying what we call nature, liberates both science and non-scientific knowledge. The error of scientism is responsible for much of the modern suspicion of science. And it underlies most of the militants atheist arguments against religion. Even though scientism is not proved by science, and as formal philosophy is largely discredited, the worldview still remains highly influential today. Often its presumptions are tacitly held by both sides of the culture wars, leading to irreconcilable confrontation. Rejecting scientism enables a principled intellectual reconciliation with religious faith, and with the rest of knowledge.… (más)
Miembro:KBLOS
Título:Monopolizing Knowledge
Autores:Ian Hutchinson (Autor)
Información:Fias Publishing (2011), 272 pages
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Monopolizing Knowledge por Ian Hutchinson

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Can real knowledge be found other than by science?

In this unique approach to understanding today's culture wars, MIT
professor of nuclear science and engineering, Ian Hutchinson, answers
emphatically yes. He shows how scientism --- the often implicitly-held
contrary view that science is all the knowledge there is --- acts to
suffocate reason, religion, and ultimately science itself. Tracing the
history of the growth of scientism alongside natural science, and
their frequent confusion, Hutchinson explains the characteristics that
make modern science so persuasive and powerful, but at the same time
restrict its scope of application. He shows how a proper recognition
of science's scope, and a proper identification of what we call
nature, makes sense of both science and non-scientific knowledge like
history, law, politics, philosophy, sociology, and religion.

The error of scientism is responsible for much of the modern suspicion
of science by large sections of society and the academy. And it
underlies most of the militant atheist arguments against religion,
which are here concisely refuted. Even though, as Hutchinson explains,
scientism is not proved by science, and scientism as formal philosophy
is largely discredited, the world-view still remains highly
influential today. Often, its presumptions are held by both sides of
the debate, leading to irreconcilable confrontation. But in fact
modern science developed out of a Christian understanding of the
world. Science has been advanced, very often, by sincere Christian
believers, who did not suppose that religious knowledge, or indeed any
other non-scientific knowledge was ruled out by science. Rejecting
scientism enables a principled intellectual reconciliation of science
with religious faith, and with the rest of knowledge
  tony_sturges | Jun 22, 2017 |
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Can real knowledge be found other than by science? In this unique approach to understanding today's culture wars, an MIT physicist answers emphatically yes. He shows how scientism--the view that science is all the real knowledge there is--suffocates reason as well as religion. Tracing the history of scientism and its frequent confusion with science, Hutchinson explains what makes modern science so persuasive and powerful, but restricts its scope. Recognizing science's limitations, and properly identifying what we call nature, liberates both science and non-scientific knowledge. The error of scientism is responsible for much of the modern suspicion of science. And it underlies most of the militants atheist arguments against religion. Even though scientism is not proved by science, and as formal philosophy is largely discredited, the worldview still remains highly influential today. Often its presumptions are tacitly held by both sides of the culture wars, leading to irreconcilable confrontation. Rejecting scientism enables a principled intellectual reconciliation with religious faith, and with the rest of knowledge.

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