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Felix Kaufmann's Theory and Method in the Social Sciences
Incommensurability, Rationality and Relativism: In Science, Culture and Science Education
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Author(s):
Harvey Siegel
Publication date
(Print):
2001
Publisher:
Springer Netherlands
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The Rationality of Science
W Newton-Smith
(1981)
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The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
TS Kuhn
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T. Kuhn
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T. KUHN
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(1970)
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Science Teaching: The Role of History and Philosophy of Science
M. MATTHEWS
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MR Matthews
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R. Matthews Michael
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(1994)
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Publication date (Print):
2001
Pages
: 207-224
DOI:
10.1007/978-94-015-9680-0_8
SO-VID:
87277c8f-cfb6-4d8d-9d75-2681b1a64630
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Reference, (In)Commensurability and Meanings
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 1
Felix Kaufmann in Perspective: An Introductory Essay
pp. 1
Introduction One: Simmel as a Puzzling Figure
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 11
Aristotle and Archimedes (384–322 and 287–212 B.C)
pp. 3
Mandonnet, The Speculum Astronomiae and the Condemnation of 1277
pp. 103
Theory and Method in the Social Sciences by Felix Kaufmann: An English Translation
pp. 11
Further Condemnations, Debates and “Consultationes”
pp. 13
Descartes and Jesuit Mathematical Education
pp. 15
Four Methods of Empirical Inquiry in the Aftermath of Newton’s Challenge
pp. 16
Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519)
pp. 17
Inflection
pp. 22
On the Developmental Life-History of Myzostomum (1866)
pp. 29
Friedrich Adler
pp. 65
Changing Laws and Shifting Concepts
pp. 9
Introduction Two: Simmel as a Puzzling Figure for Contemporary Sociology
pp. 13
On The Current Rediscovery of Georg Simmel’s Sociology — A European Point of View
pp. 25
Mandonnet’s Hypothesis: Acquiescence and Doubts
pp. 28
On the Embryonic Development of Lower Crustacea (1866)
pp. 30
Jerome Cardan (1501–1576)
pp. 31
Fictitious Empiricism, Material Experiments. Conditions for Thinking the Enlightenment “Issue of Empiricism”
pp. 61
Philipp Frank
pp. 83
Power
pp. 91
Ramsification, Reference Fixing and Incommensurability
pp. 123
Incommensurability and Reality
pp. 165
Newton’s Synthesis
pp. 33
Thorndike’s Consistency. His Researches on the Speculum Astronomiae from 1923 to 1955
pp. 36
Anthropology and Darwinism (1875)
pp. 39
Georg Simmel’s Concept of Society
pp. 41
The Impossibility of Perpetual Motion
pp. 47
Experimentum crucis: Newton’s Empiricism at the Crossroads
pp. 85
Erwin Schrödinger
pp. 95
The First Attempt at Reforming Mathematics
pp. 105
Otto Neurath 1913–1915
pp. 143
Incommensurability and the Priority of Metaphysics
pp. 159
The Mathematical Background of the Regulae ad Directionem Ingenii
pp. 45
Albert’s ‘Auctoritas’: Contemporaries and Collaborators
pp. 47
The Alexandrian Sources of Medieval Statics
pp. 57
Georg Simmel and the Study of Modernity
pp. 60
Essay on Questions about the Origin of Species (1876)
pp. 71
The Experiments of Willem Jacob ’s Gravesande: A Validation of Leibnizian Dynamics Against Newton?
pp. 123
Von Hayek, Bergmann, and Mayerhöfer
pp. 159
Incommensurability and the Normative Foundations of Scientific Knowledge
pp. 205
The Géométrie of 1637
pp. 51
Astrology in the Early Dominican School and Gerard of Feltre
pp. 75
The World as Human Construction
pp. 75
Statics During the Middle Ages Jordanus de Nemore
pp. 87
Empiricism as a Rhetoric of Legitimation: Maupertuis and the Shape of the Earth
pp. 92
Comparative Embryological Studies (1881–1885)
pp. 123
Philosophical and Scientific Empiricism and Rationalism in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
pp. 139
Wittgenstein’s Machist Sources
pp. 144
Embryological Studies on Medusae: On the Evolutionary Origins of the Primary Tissues (1886)
pp. 181
Reasons, Radical Change and Incommensurability in Science
pp. 281
Interim Consideration
pp. 61
Astrology in Albert’s Undisputed Works
pp. 92
The Statics of the Middle Ages (Continued) the School of Jordanus
pp. 99
Four Concepts of Social Science at Berlin University: Dilthey, Lazarus, Schmoller and Simmel
pp. 109
Simmel’s Contribution to Parsons’ Action Theory and its Fate
pp. 114
The Statics of the Middle Ages and Leonardo da Vinci
pp. 139
Buffon’s Natural History: The Catalogue of Facts and the Temptation of System
pp. 159
Carnap’s Machist “Phase”
pp. 207
Incommensurability, Rationality and Relativism: In Science, Culture and Science Education
pp. 207
The Struggle for Existence between Parts of the Animal Organism (1892)
pp. 289
‘Universal Mathematics’ in Aristotle
pp. 75
Are “Deaf and Dumb” Stars and Their Movers at the Origins of Modern Science? Another Historiographical Case-Study
pp. 131
Simmel on Memory
pp. 138
The School of Jordanus in the 16th Century Nicolo Tartaglia
pp. 169
What Does It Mean to Be an Empiricist in Medicine? Baglivi’s De praxi medica (1696)
pp. 187
Musil between Mach and Stumpf
pp. 225
Incommensurability and “Multicultural Science”
pp. 333
‘Mathesis Universalis’ in the Sixteenth Century
pp. 83
Not the Heavens, But God Alone is Endowed with Life and the Stars are Simply His Instruments
pp. 148
The Reaction Against Jordanus Guido Ubaldo — G. B. Benedetti
pp. 155
Social Differentiation and Modernity: On Simmel’s Macrosociology
pp. 189
Empiricism and Certainty in Science: The Franco-Berlin School of Empiricism
pp. 211
Husserl VS. Jerusalem
pp. 241
Incommensurability and Conceptual Change during the Copernican Revolution
pp. 359
‘Mathesis Universalis’ in the Seventeenth Century
pp. 95
Divine Providence and the Meaning of “Interrogationes”
pp. 105
Albert’s Biblionomia
pp. 166
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642)
pp. 181
Simmel’s Sociology in Relation to Schopenhauer’s Philosophy
pp. 203
Was Early Eighteenth-Century Chemistry an Empirical Science?
pp. 237
Alois Höfler — Polymath
pp. 275
Concept Formation and Commensurability
pp. 419
Conclusion
pp. 113
The Literary Tradition of the Speculum and Its Role as a Reference Book
pp. 184
Simon Stevin (1548–1620)
pp. 199
Simmel on the Ratio of Subjective Values to Objective Cultural Possibilities
pp. 215
Conducting Observations and Tests: Lambert’s Theory of Empirical Science
pp. 277
The University of Vienna Philosophical Society
pp. 121
Conclusion
pp. 201
The French Contribution to Statics — Roberval
pp. 225
On the Concept of “Erleben” in Georg Simme’s Sociology
pp. 235
From Locke to Materialism: Empiricism, the Brain and the Stirrings of Ontology
pp. 226
The French Contribution to Statics (Continued) René Descartes (1596–1650)
pp. 243
Georg simmel as an Analyst of Autonomous Dynamics: The Merry-Go-Round of Fashion1
pp. 259
Simmel, Individuality, and Fundamental Change
pp. 261
The Mechanical Properties of the Center of Gravity from Albert of Saxony to Evangelista Torricelli
pp. 283
Georg Simmel’s Theory of Culture
pp. 357
The Doctrine of Albert of Saxony and the Geostaticians
pp. 297
The Groundwork of Simmel’s New “Storey” Beneath Historical Materialism
pp. 380
The Systematization of the Laws of Statics
pp. 319
Georg Simmel and the Cultural Dilemma of Women
pp. 341
Dimensions of Conflict: Georg Simmel on Modern Life
pp. 357
Simmel’s Influence on Lukács’s Conception of the Sociology of Art
pp. 375
Simmel’s Metaphysics
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