This volume, honoring the renowned historian of science, Allen G Debus, explores ideas of science - `experiences of nature' - from within a historiographical tradition that Debus has done much to define. As his work shows, the sciences do not develop exclusively as a result of a progressive and inexorable logic of discovery. A wide variety of extra-scientific factors, deriving from changing intellectual contexts and differing social millieus, play crucial roles in the overall development of scientific thought. These essays represent case studies in a broad range of scientific settings - from sixteenth-century astronomy and medicine, through nineteenth-century biology and mathematics, to the social sciences in the twentieth-century - that show the impact of both social settings and the cross-fertilization of ideas on the formation of science. Aimed at a general audience interested in the history of science, this book closes with Debus's personal perspective on the development of the field.
Audience: This book will appeal especially to historians of science, of chemistry, and of medicine.
ISBN: | 9789401064545 |
Publication date: | 13th October 2012 |
Author: | P Theerman, Karen Hunger Parshall |
Publisher: | Springer an imprint of Springer Netherlands |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 312 pages |
Series: | The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science |
Genres: |
History Historiography Philosophy of science Sociology History of medicine Chemistry |