The Structure of Scientific Revolutions |
Contents
A ROLE FOR HISTORY | 1 |
THE ROUTE TO NORMAL SCIENCE | 10 |
THE NATURE OF NORMAL SCIENCE | 23 |
Copyright | |
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accepted achieved Alexandre Koyré already anomaly answer apparatus applications argument Aristotelian articulation assimilation astronomers atomic caloric theory Cambridge candidate for paradigm century chap characteristics chemical chemistry chemists concepts contemporary Copernican Copernicus counterinstances crisis Dalton digm discovered discovery display dynamics E. T. Whittaker effects eighteenth Einstein electrical emergence essay example existence experimental experiments fact field fundamental Furthermore Galileo historian history of science invention J. R. Partington Lavoisier Lavoisier's laws least Leyden jar Maxwell's mechanics ment motion nature Newton's Newtonian normal research normal science novelties observation optics oxygen paradigm change particles particular pendulum phenomena philosophy phlogiston theory physical practice previously Priestley prob problems professional puzzle quantum quantum mechanics question recognized result Robert Boyle role rules scientific community scientific development scientific revolutions scientific theory scientists Section shift solution solved sort standards success suggest swinging stone T. S. Kuhn textbooks tion tonian X-rays