Re: virus: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions

Joe E. Dees (jdees0@students.uwf.edu)
Thu, 9 Jul 1998 15:25:09 +0000


> Date: Thu, 09 Jul 1998 00:44:34 -0400
> From: Eric Boyd <6ceb3@qlink.queensu.ca>
> Organization: Religious Engineers Inc.
> To: "virus@lucifer.com" <virus@lucifer.com>
> Subject: virus: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
> Reply-to: virus@lucifer.com

> virions,
>
> Just thought I'd pass along a recommendation for a book:
>
> The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 2nd edition
> by Thomas S. Kuhn, 1970
> (International Encylopedia of Unified Science, volume 2, number 2)
>
> For once, somebody actually looked at the way science worked *historically*
> in order to determine how science works, rather than the much more usual
> arm-chair philosopher approach...
>
> Certainly it reveals a different picture than we usually frame science
> with.
>
> According to my dad, this book (or actually large essay is more
> appropriate) was voted by the U. o. Guelph philosophy department to be one
> of the five most important academic works in the twentieth century. Of
> course, he said he has never heard of three of the others...
>
> ERiC
>
His other book, THE ESSENTIAL TENSION, is good, too.