Abstract
The publication of the first English translation of Karl Popper's The Logic of Scientific Discovery in 1959 marked the end of a long period of stability in the philosophy of science and the beginning of a period of rapid development and change, marked by the work of Kuhn, Lakatos, Feyerabend, Laudan, Putnam, and others. The late 1950s also marked the end of a long period of stability in the school science curriculum and the onset of the rapid curriculum developments of the 1960s and 1970s (the Nuffield and Schools Council courses in the U.K., PSSC Physics, Harvard Project Physics, BSCS, CBA, CHEM Study and others in the United States, and ASEP in Australia). Unfortunately, developments in the philosophy of science did not inform and guide developments in the science curriculum. Despite the growing number of books and articles dealing with the curricular implications of issues in the philosophy of science, science teachers and science curriculum developers remain surprisingly ill-informed about fundamental...
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