Abstract

Long-term history of science: on the flexibility and fragility of scientific disciplines Most scientific disciplines, such as chemistry, biology and physics, are now about two centuries old. Using physics as a case study the present paper aims to account for this longevity. What kept the physics discipline together from the early nineteenth century onwards? Literature on the rise of physics suggests that the discipline was formed around energy, the ether, or other theoretical notions. Yet the twentieth-century revolutions in physics showed that the discipline could prosper without some of its most 'fundamental' concepts. Some scholars conclude that internal factors are therefore irrelevant and disciplinary identity and continuity are purely institutional. Drawing on the work of Thomas Kuhn, Peter Galison and Andrew Warwick, this paper defends a different point of view. Although there is no intellectual core of disciplines, the prolonged existence of disciplines cannot be explained without some degree of internal continuity. If there is a revolution of a theoretical level, there may still be continuity on the level of experimental practices (and vice versa). It is this flexibility that accounts for the fact that disciplines may adapt to different circumstances. In addition, an educational tradition is required to transmit knowledge from one generation to the next.

Highlights

  • Peter Galison spreekt van het onderwijs als een ‘hidden history of physics’, achter de opeenvolging van grote theorieën: ‘For a proper long-term history of experimental culture, we must descend [...] to the instrumental practices conveyed through apprenticeship from one scientific generation to the ’

  • Using physics as a case study the present paper aims to account for this longevity

  • Andrew Warwick is het met Thomas Kuhn en Michel Foucault eens dat disciplinering, of machtsuitoefening, kennisproductie niet remt maar juist mogelijk maakt

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In de geschiedenis van de wetenschap is alles aan verandering onderhevig.[28] Als dit beeld klopt en de discontinuïteit tussen paradigma’s inderdaad compleet is, dan lijkt het beeld gerechtvaardigd dat na dergelijke revoluties alleen de naam en institutionele inbedding van disciplines behouden blijft. (Het is daarom merkwaardig dat hij zich herhaaldelijk tegen Kuhn afzet.) In How Experiments End, een studie naar de ontwikkeling van de experimentele natuurkunde in de twintigste eeuw, maakt hij onderscheid tussen lange, middellange- en korte termijn constraints (inperkingen, grenzen van het onderzoekskader).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call