Editor’s Introduction
Editor’s Note
Thomas S. Kuhn: Scientific Knowledge as Historical Product
Abstract for “The Presence of Past Science (The Shearman Memorial
Lectures)”
Thomas S. Kuhn: The Presence of Past Science (The Shearman Memorial
Lectures)
Lecture I: Regaining the Past
Lecture II: Portraying the Past
Lecture III: Embodying the Past
Abstract for The Plurality of Worlds: An Evolutionary Theory of
Scientific Development
Thomas S. Kuhn: The Plurality of Worlds: An Evolutionary Theory of
Scientific Development
Acknowledgments
Part I: The Problem
Chapter 1: Scientific
Knowledge as Historical Product
Chapter 2: Breaking into
the Past
Chapter 3: Taxonomy and
Incommensurability
Part II: A World of Kinds
Chapter 4: Biological
Prerequisites to Linguistic Description: Track and Situations
Chapter 5: Natural
Kinds: How Their Names Mean
Chapter 6: Practices,
Theories, and Artefactual Kinds
Bibliography
Editor’s Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Thomas S. Kuhn (1922–96) was an American philosopher and the Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. One of the most influential philosophers of science of the twentieth century, he wrote many books, including The Copernican Revolution, The Essential Tension, and Black-Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity, 1894–1912, all also published by the University of Chicago Press. Bojana Mladenović is professor of philosophy at Williams College. She is the author of Kuhn’s Legacy: Epistemology, Metaphilosophy, and Pragmatism.
“A fascinating sketch of Kuhn’s mature thought. . . . The
proponents of competing paradigms may practice their trades in
different worlds, but, as Kuhn was at pains to stress in his last
writings, sometimes those worlds are closer than we think.”
*Los Angeles Review of Books*
"The road from The Structure of Scientific Revolutions to the
drafts in Last Writings was, to a large extent, a long walk
back—Kuhn’s attempt to clarify, revise, secure, and modify the
‘purple passages,' to dissociate himself and his book from the
vulgar and the relativists. In one matter, however, he stuck firmly
to a sentiment in the book that had given aid and comfort to the
supposed ‘enemies of science.' You should not, Kuhn had written,
think that scientific change brought practitioners ‘closer and
closer to the truth.'"
*London Review of Books*
"The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) by philosopher of
science Kuhn is ‘indispensable reading for every well-educated
person,’ writes philosopher Mladenović in her introduction to this
collection. She presents unpublished drafts of a reworking of
Structure’s philosophical framework, with the texts of two lectures
not previously published in English. Together, these explore
whether historians can understand past scientific paradigms, even
though these are incommensurable with present science."
*Nature*
"Readers can see Kuhn grappling with the differences between his
own needs, as a philosopher and historian, and the needs of current
scientists. . . . When we 'transition between worlds' today, many
of us habitually presume that, in disagreements, our opponents are
simply lying. Of course, this happens sometimes. But more common, I
think, are interactions involving the Kuhnian difficulties of
translation. One of the enduring lessons from Thomas Kuhn is that
of just how difficult it is to imagine the mental lives of others,
and of just how easily truths can be lost in their transit from one
mind to another."
*3 Quarks Daily*
"Mladenović . . . has done a great service with her new book The
Last Writings of Thomas S Kuhn. Containing the unfinished draft of
a book that Kuhn was still working on when he died in 1996, Last
Writings brings much needed clarity to Kuhn’s philosophy and his
understanding of how science develops. . . . Granted, Kuhn’s work
was unfinished, but hopefully, the Last Writings will reinvigorate
conversations about incommensurability for years to come."
*Physics World*
"Kuhn’s seminal 1962 history The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions gets a posthumous follow-up in this complex volume. . .
. Mladenović provides a comprehensive and thoughtful introduction
to the work. . . . Philosophy lovers . . . will find plenty to chew
on."
*Publishers Weekly*
"This book offers an editorial reconstruction of Thomas Kuhn's
uncompleted final work, The Plurality of Worlds. . . Kuhn
argues for a view of past and current science as empirically
grounded and scientific change as rational, while retaining the
insight that competing scientific paradigms are incommensurable. .
. Recommended."
*Choice*
"Mladenović's edition of some of Kuhn’s last and most
valuable writings is a gem for philosophers of science. . . . The
writings of his last stage as a philosopher of science exhibit a
profound awareness of the intricacies and consequences of his
particular approach to the field. A careful reading of this volume
shows this and many other interpretive keys for Kuhn’s philosophy
of science. I hope that this brief summary of the volume will do as
an invitation to read and reread this wonderful incomplete
treatise. Kuhn’s thinking is still alive in these pages."
*Journal for General Philosophy of Science*
"After being on the wish-list of many historians and philosophers
of science for decades, The Last Writings of Thomas S. Kuhn are
finally available and open to discussion for interested readers. .
. . The editor obviously did detailed and hard work on the
manuscripts, some of which were left unfinished and required
substantial engagement with the pieces, notes, and a significant
knowledge of Kuhn’s person, intention, and works. The editorial
work is also reflected in the additional notes at the end of the
volume—explaining some of Kuhn’s mysterious remarks, mistakes, or
unfinished sections—and a short index. . . . Leaving plenty of
space for further discussion and comparisons, one remains in a
state of puzzlement when asked whether The Last Writings belongs to
philosophy, sociology, or history of science, or perhaps to the
even newer trends of history and philosophy of science. The
sciences, including psychology, neurology, comparative
anthropology, and cognitive enterprises, are marching forward,
providing sufficient material for philosophers to engage with."
*Metascience*
"The Last Writings pave the way for the development of new
approaches by epistemologists, providing useful philosophical
tools. More generally, this collection gives elements of answers to
classical problems, such as the relationship between language and
the world or the status of truth in science."
*Quarterly Review of Biology*
“Combining Kuhn’s unfinished last book, The Plurality of
Worlds, with two related works not previously available in English,
and a substantial and illuminating introduction by
editor Bojana Mladenović, The Last Writings of Thomas S.
Kuhn will be received as an absolute gem by philosophers of
science, as well as by the wide swath of academics across the
social sciences and humanities who revere Kuhn.”
*Cheryl Misak, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto,
author of "Frank Ramsey: A Sheer Excess of Powers"*
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