Professor Joseph Agassi has published his Towards an Historiography of Science in 1963. It received many reviews by notable ...
Continue readingIn this book, Craig Dilworth answers all the questions raised by the incommensurability thesis. Logical empiricism cannot ...
Continue readingThis monograph contributes to the scientific misconduct debate from an oblique perspective, by analysing seven novels devoted ...
Continue readingThis volume collects together a number of important papers concerning both the method of abstraction generally and the use ...
Continue readingEmploying exceedingly rich material Katzir gains interesting insights into the nature of scientific development from this ...
Continue readingThis book presents a multidisciplinary perspective on chance, with contributions from distinguished researchers in the areas ...
Continue readingThis study brings together ideas developed over many years in various lectures in an endeavour to clarify the concept of ...
Continue readingThe English Galileo, the first book in series, investigates the shared knowledge of preclassical mechanics by relating the ...
Continue readingReflects on the effects of recent discoveries in genetics on a broad range of scientific fields. In addition to neuroscience, ...
Continue readingThe roots of this work lie in my earlier book, Scientific Progress, which first appeared in 1981. One of its topics, the ...
Continue readingThe pendulum is a universal topic in primary and secondary schools, but its full potential for learning about physics, the ...
Continue readingCarl Friedrich von Weizsäcker‘s "Aufbau der Physik", first published in 1985, was intended as an overview of his lifelong ...
Continue readingThe book contains methodology, causation, and reduction, and include philosophy of logic and physics, philosophy of psychology ...
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