Click to Enlarge
Download a Free Excerpt from How Scientific Progress Occurs: Incrementalism and the Life Sciences: Preface Introduction Paradigm Shifts, Incrementalism, or Both?
Download a Free Excerpt from How Scientific Progress Occurs: Incrementalism and the Life Sciences:
Preface Introduction Paradigm Shifts, Incrementalism, or Both?
© 2018 209 pages, illustrated (10 color and 46 B&W), index Hardcover $57 45.60 ISBN 978-1-621822-97-4 You save: 20% You will receive free shipping on this item at checkout. Free shipping offer applies to direct website purchases by individual U.S. and Canada customers only. Print Book + eBook Best value! $108 $51.30 Print Book$57 $45.60 eBook$51 $40.80 Bulk discounts available for your lab or class. Click here to inquire. eBooks use Adobe Digital Editions software. Click here for more information.
Bulk discounts available for your lab or class. Click here to inquire.
eBooks use Adobe Digital Editions software. Click here for more information.
The idea of a paradigm shift was initially presented in Thomas Kuhns influential book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). Kuhn used this conceptthe creation of a new world-viewto explain how scientific progress develops, specifically in the physical sciences. But does this concept also apply to the biological sciences? Noted geneticist and science historian Elof Carlson explores this question in this book. Carlson had originally posed this question to Kuhn in the early 1970s, asking why paradigm shifts were rare or nonexistent in the life sciences. Kuhn’s response was that the physical sciences depended more on theory than biology did and that biology was largely descriptive.
How Scientific Progress Occurs: Incrementalism and the Life Sciences examines how progress in the life sciences occurs. Detailed narratives of the development of the fields of, for example, cell theory, gene theory, mutation, evolution, and several others are presented as evidence. And because of the interconnection of the life sciences, cognate fields and shared tools that they may use are also considered. Carlson concludes that progress in the life sciences occurs by a process that he calls incrementalism, which is analogous to Kuhns normal sciencebut in Carlsons view is raised to a more significant level. As he states in this book, Scientists are not solving a jigsaw puzzle. Most of the time they have no idea where innovation will lead and the paradigm, if it exists, is a constantly changing one, not a photograph on a box propped up on the table for us to look at. This insightful journey exploring progress in the life sciences will appeal to historians of science, student, and working scientists, as well as philosophers of science.
“This insightful journey exploring progress in the life sciences will appeal to historians of science, student, and working scientists, as well as philosophers of science.” www.nhbs.com