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132Michael Polanyi and Spontaneous Order, 1941-1951Tradition and Discovery 24 (2): 14-28. 1997.Polanyi’s theory of spontaneous order is set in historical context, analyzed, and compared to Friedrich Hayek’s version.
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119From Logic to Liberty: Theories of Knowledge in Two Works of John Stuart MillCanadian Journal of Philosophy 16 (4). 1986.This paper is designed to reinterpret and clarify John Stuart Mill's ideas on science. Past discussions of these ideas strike me as unsatisfactory in two crucial respects. In the first place they have encouraged us to regard Mill's principal work on epistemology, A System of Logic, as fundamentally inductivist This is the received interpretation of Mill's Logic and one finds it summarized and affirmed in the remark of Laurens Laudan that 'by and large' Mill was 'a rather orthodox inductivist who…Read more
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157Two Sources of Michael Polanyi's Prototypal Notion of Incommensurability: Evans-Pritchard on Azande Witchcraft and St Augustine on ConversionHistory of the Human Sciences 16 (2): 57-76. 2003.Michael Polanyi argues in Personal Knowledge (1958) that conceptual frameworks involved in major scientific controversies are separated by a `logical gap'. Such frameworks, according to Polanyi (1958: 151), are logically disconnected: their protagonists think differently, use different languages and occupy different worlds. Relinquishing one framework and adopting another, Polanyi's scientist undergoes a `conversion' to a new `faith'. Polanyi, in other words, presaged Kuhn and Feyerabend's conce…Read more
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131Tradition as a Topic of Philosophic Interest in Britain in the 1940sJournal of Philosophical Research 37 313-335. 2012.Between 1945 and 1948, Michael Polanyi, Michael Oakeshott, and Karl Popper respectively discussed the nature of tradition, and the part that traditions play in free societies. This article analyzes these thinkers’ ideas of tradition. Polanyi depicted tradition as knowledge that is embodied in skilled practice, and tradition for Oakeshott consists in activities that are suffused with practical knowledge and technique. Popper emphasized rational criticizability, whereas Polanyi and Oakeshott empha…Read more
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164Locke, McCann, and voluntarismPacific Philosophical Quarterly 78 (4). 1997.Locke scholars continue to disagree over how he analyzed natural laws, real essence-power relations in physical substances. Some say he regarded them as emanations, necessitated by the corpuscular structure of real essences; for others his laws are adventitious, imposed on substances by God and contingent on divine alterable will. The second view has been increasingly favored in recent years, assisted no doubt by Edwin McCann's potent case for it in "Lockean Mechanism" (1985). The present articl…Read more
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56Bentham, science and the construction of jurisprudenceHistory of European Ideas 12 (5): 583-594. 1990.
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53It is a testimony to the enduring importance of Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions that, 30 years on, its doctrines of normal science and paradigm, incommensurability and revolution continue to challenge metascien tists and stimulate vigorous debate. Critique has mainly come from philosophers and historians; by and large, interested sociologists have embraced Kuhn. Un justifiably so, this article argues, bringing to light a serious difficulty or anom aly in his account of the …Read more
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125Michael Polanyi and Thomas KuhnTradition and Discovery 33 (2): 25-36. 2006.The article argues that Polanyi was a likely source of influence on the theory of science that Kuhn developed in his The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). The striking similarity between Kuhn’s idea ofincommuensurability and Polanyi’s rendering of scientific controversy in Personal Knowledge is featured here, and is used to expose a tension between Polanyi's notions of scientific controversy and unfolding truth.
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169J. B. Conant's other assistant: Science as depicted by Leonard K. Nash, including reference to Thomas KuhnPerspectives on Science 18 (3): 328-351. 2010.Born in 1918 in New York, awarded a doctorate in analytical chemistry (1944), Leonard K. Nash enjoyed a distinguished career at Harvard, holding a chair of chemistry from 1959 to 1986. Conducting research in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, Nash authored successful textbooks, some of which remain in print (e.g. Elements of Chemical Thermodynamics, and Elements of Statistical Thermodynamics).This essay describes the theory of science that Nash developed in a book he published in 1963, Th…Read more
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81Polanyi's presagement of the incommensurability conceptStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 33 (1): 101-116. 2002.Kuhn and Feyerabend have little to say about the thought of Michael Polanyi, and the secondary literature on Polanyi's relation to them is meagre. I argue that Polanyi's view, in Personal knowledge and in other writings, of conceptual frameworks ‘segregated’ by a ‘logical gap’ as giving rise to controversies in science foreshadowed Kuhn and Feyerabend's theme of incommensurability. The similarity between the thinkers is, I suggest, no coincidence.
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141Laws of Nature, Corpuscules, and ConcourseJournal of Philosophical Research 19 373-393. 1994.It has been said that Robert Boyle gave in the century of The Scientific Revolution the “fullest expression” of the view that laws of nature are continually impressed by God (“occasionalism”). So regarded, the universe is anything but an autonomous machine, its ordered operation depending on God’s continuous imposition of lawful, patterned relations between phenomena and his continuous provision of motion for them to actually enter relations. The present paper contests this treatment of Boyle. E…Read more
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38Science and British Liberalism : Locke, Bentham, Mill, and PopperAshgate Publishing. 1991.The thinking of these philosophers is examined to assess the extent to which science affected their theories of social and political life. The book shows that the general notion of English liberalism being grounded in science is incorrect. It offers a broad study of the interface between theories of science and liberal political thought and sheds new light on the four philosophers.
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45Michael Polanyi on the education and knowledge of scientistsScience & Education 9 (3): 309-320. 2000.
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151John Stuart mill on induction and hypothesesJournal of the History of Philosophy 29 (1): 69-83. 1991.A study of the development of Mill's thought through successive editions of _A System of Logic. His view of the genesis of most scientific laws, it is argued, progressively shifted from inductivism to hypothetico-deductivism. Mill's analysis of hypotheses and of methods for their assessment is considered in detail. New light is shed on relations between Mill's metascience and that of William Whewell
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7Abilita artigianale, conoscenza tacita e altri elementi della praica: la prospettiva di Michael PolanyiDiscipline Filosofiche 14 (1): 101-118. 2004.
Areas of Interest
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |