Hacking Kuhn

  • Mauricio Suárez
DOI:
Keywords: Thomas Kuhn, Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Ian Hacking, New Experimentalism, phenomena and data, historiography,

Abstract

Thomas Kuhn’s work, particularly his famous book Structure of Scientific Revolutions, is often interpreted as a failed attempt to defend four radical thesis about science: epistemic pessimism, semantic relativism, methodological irrationalism and metaphysical idealism. In this paper I argue that such interpretation depends essentially on a false model of scientific knowledge, according to which the objects of scientific belief are always explanatory scientific theories, which are in turn empirically confirmed by means of a direct comparison with observable data and facts. This model has been importantly criticised by Ian Hacking and other defenders of the new experimentalism movement in philosophy of science, who have shown it to be untenable. I then argue that there is textual evidence in Kuhn’s own work in favour of new experimentalism; this shows that Kuhn’s work is more varied and less coherent than is supposed by his critics. I finish by questioning the need or desirability for a unique and coherent interpretation of Kuhn’s whole ouvre, and its historical impact.
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Published
2003-01-01
Section
Articles

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