Response to "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions” by Thomas Kuhn
How the Reading Has Affected What I Believe about the Nature of Science and What It Can Tell Us about the World
Science has always been a part of the world: people from the beginning of time have asked questions about nature and the world—and they have based their answers on evidence. Discovering laws or formulating theories is part of the process of science. But so too is something like building or designing or doing mathematics or making a work of art. The science of architecture, or the science of medicine—these sciences are always growing and developing in new ways because the human mind is not static. It can look back on all of human history and on personal experience to make new discoveries and to advance the field of science in unique ways. The reading really opened this idea up to me, first off by discussing the notion of science in terms of the big breakthroughs—i.e., the Newtonian breakthrough (gravity), the Einstein breakthrough (relativity), and so on. People might have understood that things fall—but it took Newton’s theory to help explain the why. Considering the history of human life, that is a relatively modern theory, which indicates that science is still very much a field that has a lot of room to grow.
As Kuhn (1972) points out, “normal science” is that science which builds upon the work of others—i.e., “research firmly based upon one or more past scientific achievements, achievements that some particular scientific community acknowledges for a time as supplying the foundation for its further practice” (p.10). Kuhn’s point is that science is normal when it is growing, when it is standing on the shoulders of those who came before and finding what else it can make sense of or explain. This is what Kuhn describes as the “acquisition of a paradigm” (Kuhn, 1972, p. 11). It is important to realize, however, that paradigms are not wholly complete in and of themselves. New discoveries—such as the movement of planets and stars—only come about with changes in technology. The telescope required a new scientific explanation to address the reality, and Newton, for example, helped to provide that explanation. This is how science works, as Kuhn describes it.
Science can thus tell us about the world by shedding light on the dynamics at play. Science relies on proof but it takes a rational mind to arrive at that ability to collect the right data in the first place. That data then needs to be interpreted and the interpretation of facts is a science in and of itself. In short, science and the world around us and somewhat constantly in a state of revision—of new thinkers and researchers looking at...
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