Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought

by Thomas S. Kuhn

Paperback, 1959

Status

Available

Call number

523.2

Collection

Publication

Modern Library Paperback (1959), Paperback, 300 pages

Description

"The author brings to a common focus the considered approach of the historian, the technical understanding of the scientist and the skill and experience of an able teacher. No careful reader of this well-wrought volume can fail to appreciate the nicely balanced interplay of these elements in the full explication of one of the major turning points in the evolution of scientific thought. For those concerned with the teaching of the history of science, this discussion of the issues involved in the Copernican revolution will prove to be indispensable, a superb analysis of the anatomy of revolution. Those drawn to the question of meaning which the historian of science can give to the evolution of ideas will find this book equally valuable, a paradigm of synthesis and interpretation." [Isis]… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member profsuperplum
“This book is the story of the Copernican Revolution in all three of these not quite separate meanings – astronomical, scientific, and philosophical.”
“Initiated as a narrowly technical, highly mathematical revision of classical astronomy, the Copernican theory became one focus for the
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tremendous controversies in religion, in philosophy, and in social theory, which, during the two centuries following the discovery of America set the tenor of the modern mind.”
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LibraryThing member Darrol
Apart from the scientific import of the Copernican Revolution, Kuhn's book plays an illustrative role in the still needed polemic against Christian fundamentalism. It provides (at least hints at) parallels between the fundamentalist arguments against evolution (and other science influenced
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practices) and the old biblical arguments against Copernicus.
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Language

Original publication date

1957

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