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(2015) Kuhn's structure of scientific revolutions, Dordrecht, Springer.

Kuhn and the historiography of science

Alexander Bird

pp. 23-38

This chapter discusses Kuhn's conception of the history of science by focussing on two respects in which Kuhn is an historicist historian and philosopher of science. I identify two distinct, but related, aspects of historicism in the work of Hegel and show how these are also found in Kuhn's work. First, Kuhn held tradition to be important for understanding scientific change and that the tradition from which a scientific idea originates must be understood in evaluating that idea. This makes Kuhn a historicist in a sense we may call conservative (drawing on Mannheim). Secondly, Kuhn held that there is a pattern to the development of science. In the light of the fact that he held scientific change to be law-like, we can call this second aspect of Kuhn's historicism determinist (in parallel with Marx). I discuss the relationship of Kuhn's historicist historiography to the philosophical purposes he had for his history of science, namely to refute a conception of scientific progress as driven towards increasing truth by something like "the scientific method". I argue that while this determinism refutes certain positivist conceptions of scientific change, it also requires internalism—the view that the causes of scientific change come from within science, not from outside. Consequently, Kuhn's historiography of science contrasts with that implicit in much of post-Kuhnian science studies.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-13383-6_3

Full citation:

Bird, A. (2015)., Kuhn and the historiography of science, in W. J. Devlin & A. Bokulich (eds.), Kuhn's structure of scientific revolutions, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 23-38.

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