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Cargando... The Scientific Revolution (science * culture) (edición 1998)por Steven Shapin
Información de la obraThe Scientific Revolution por Steven Shapin
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. This book is a masterpiece of historical scholarship. Shapin synthesizes two decades of sophisticated historical research by himself and many other scholars that has challenged the canonical account of the scientific revolution rooted in a naive scientific realism. In Shapin's account, the scientific revolution was much less about great scientific discoveries than about significant changes in how we think about the natural world -- what would count as valid evidence, and what practices were developed to gather such evidence. Shapin shows that these changes were driven by more than a simple desire to better understand the natural world. Rather, these new ideas and practices answered powerful social and political needs for those who championed them. Shapin presents these arguments, which have vexed the academic world, in a reasonable, even-handed manner that avoids the sociological reductionism that has sometimes marred this scholarship. Moreover, although the book is not captive to present day concerns, it does suggest that this history matters to us today if we are to understand our own attitudes toward science. What is perhaps most remarkable, Shapin has achieved all this in a concise, highly readable and compelling narrative. If you read one only one book about the scientific revolution in your life, this should be the one. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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A la vez vibrante y accesible, esta introduccion al tema de la revolucion cientifica intenta poner de relieve las practicas sociales que produjeron el conocimiento cientifico y los fines para los que estaba destinado. Muestra el modo en que la conducta de la ciencia emergio de una amplia variedad de programas filosoficos, compromisos politicos y creencias religiosas que ya existian al inicio de la edad moderna. Y, lejos de abordar la ciencia como un conjunto de ideas incorporeas, se dedica a interpretar sus modos de conocer y hacer situados en un momento historico concreto. Shapin discute las concepciones tradicionales sobre la revolucion cientifica que la tratan como un acontecimiento coherente y definitivo alegando que ya fueron contestadas por autores de los siglos XVI y XVII. De este modo, aduce que se preconizaba el experimentalismo y simultaneamente se lo rechazaba. Aunque se alababan los metodos matematicos, se contemplaban tambien con un cierto escepticismo. Por un lado, se considerabaque las concepciones mecanicas de la naturaleza definian la ciencia propiamente dicha y, por otro, se consideraban limitadas en su inteligibilidad y aplicaciones. Sin embargo, Shapin afirma que ese controvertido legado es, a pesar de todo, justamente entendido como el origen de la ciencia moderna, tanto de sus problemas como de sus logros. Se trata, pues, de un libro extraordinariamente desafiante y sofisticado en su concepcion, pero tambien conciso y legible en su exposicion: una extraordinaria fusion de sensibilidades historicas, sociologicas y filosoficas que influira profundamente en nuestro entendimiento del conocimiento cientifico y su practica. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)509Natural sciences and mathematics General Science History, geographic treatment, biographyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Shapin writes, “Pre-Copernican cosmology was literally anthropocentric,” with humans and their teleological ideas of their movement at its center (pg. 24). Challenges to this influenced what Shapin terms a major idea underpinning science in the early modern period. He writes, “So central was the machine metaphor to important strands of new science that many exponents liked to refer to their practices as the mechanical philosophy” (pg. 30). Shapin argues, “If we want ultimately to understand the appeal of mechanical metaphors in the new scientific practices – and the consequent rejection of the opposition between nature and art – we shall ultimately have to understand the power relations of an early modern European society whose patterns of living, producing, and political ordering were undergoing massive changes as feudalism gave way to early capitalism” (pg. 33). Shapin concludes, “This confidence [in mathematical and mechanistic harmony] reached its highest early modern development in the 1687 Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica of Isaac Newton (1642-1727), the English title of which was The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy. The world-machine followed laws that were mathematical in form and that could be expressed in the language of mathematics. Mathematics and mechanism were to be merged in a new definition of proper natural philosophy” (pg. 61).
Shapin argues in his second section that, despite seventeenth century scientists’ claims, the new science was not new and intricately linked to ideas that preceded it. Shapin writes, “The Scientific Revolution was significantly, but only partially, a New Thing. Nevertheless, the rhetoric of wholesale rejection and replacement draws our attention to how practitioners tended to position themselves with respect to existing philosophical traditions and institutions” (pg. 68). Even new methodologies were tied to cultural values. Shapin writes, “Formal methodology is important, therefore, in the same way that the justification of a practice is important to its recognized identity and worth” (pg. 95).
In his final section, Shapin writes, “Seventeenth-century mechanical philosophers attempted to discipline, if not in all cases to eliminate, teleological accounts of the natural world. Yet as ordinary actors they accepted the propriety of a teleological framework for interpreting human cultural action, and with some exceptions so do modern historians and social scientists: the very identity of human action – as action rather than behavior – embodies some notion of its point, purpose, or intention” (pg. 119). He continues, “Recent historical work on Galileo, for example, has stressed significance of court patronage relationships not only for his livelihood but also for the thematics and presentation of his scientific work” (pg. 126). Shapin argues, “In speaking about the purposes of changing natural knowledge in the seventeenth century, it is obligatory to treat its uses in supporting and extending broadly religious aims” (pg. 136). Further, “Galileo arguably wanted more than cultural equality for the natural philosopher: he intermittently contrasted the ambiguity of scriptural texts with the interpretive clarity of the Book of Nature. This was a sense in which the expert natural philosopher might be understood as doing a better job of interpreting God’s word than the theologian” (pg. 137).
Shapin concludes, “This is the paradox: the more a body of knowledge is understood to be objective and disinterested, the more valuable it is as a tool in moral and political action. Conversely, the capacity of a body of knowledge to make valuable contributions to moral and political problems flows from an understanding that it was not produced and evaluated to further particular human interests” (pg. 164). He cautions, “One consequence of the presentation of science developed in the seventeenth century – to be sure, one of the least important – is that many of the categories we have available for talking about science are just those whose history and sociology we wish to understand” (pg. 164). ( )