The Birth of Philosophy of Science from the Spirit of Victorian Era

Authors

  • Ilya Kasavin

Abstract

The Victorian era is a unique historical period of turbulent political, economic and social changes. These changes also touched upon science: the emergence of new theories and experimental data, new discoveries and inventions, the growth of the number of scientific societies, the debate about teaching methods in universities and the significance of science and scientists for the state laid the foundations for the institutional structure of the modern sciences. In addition, it is the Victorian era when a fundamentally new theoretical discipline, the philosophy of science, was born. At the heart of the article, there is the personality and social circle of its founder, William Whewell, the author of the fundamental work “The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences founded upon their history”. The author reconstructs the making of the philosophy of science as an independent discipline, considering it, on the one hand, as a product of the Victorian era, and on the other - as a tool for the formation of the modern sciences in all their diversity.

Published

2019-03-29

How to Cite

[1]
2019. The Birth of Philosophy of Science from the Spirit of Victorian Era. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 56, 1 (Mar. 2019), 23–33.