Author |
Tauber, Alfred |
Year |
2009 |
Publisher |
: Baylor UP |
Number of pages |
256 |
ISBN |
9781602582101 |
Keywords |
|
Abstract
Amazon (2013):
In this deeply thoughtful exploration, Alfred Tauber, a practicing scientist and highly
regarded philosopher, eloquently traces the history of the philosophy of science,
seeking in the end to place science within the humanistic context from which it originated.
Avoiding the dogmatism that has defined both extremes in the recent Science Wars and
presenting a conception of reason that lifts the discussion out of the interminable
debates about objectivity and neutrality, Tauber offers a way of understanding science
as an evolving relationship between facts and the values that govern their discovery
and applications. This timely philosophy of science presents a centrist but highly
consequential view, wherein truth and objectivity can function as working ideals and
serve as pragmatic tools within the sociological context in which they reside. For
if the humanization of science is to reach completion, it must reveal not only the
meaning it receives from its social and cultural settings but also that which it lends
to them.Packed with well-chosen case studies, Science and the Quest for Meaning is
a trust-worthy and engaging introduction to the history of, and the current debate
surrounding, the philosophy of science.