From "paradigm" to "disciplinary matrix": a fatal step

Authors

  • Nataliya I. Kuznetsova S.I. Vavilov Institute for the History of Science and Technology, Russian Academy of Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202259459

Keywords:

Philosophy of science normal science scientific revolution paradigm disciplinary matrix representation reference historiography of science epistemology

Abstract

The citation index of Thomas Kuhn's work may strike any imagination. «The Structure of Scientific Revolutions» (first edition 1962) is undoubtedly a twentieth-century record-breaker in the field of philosophy of science in terms of such a scientometric parameter. But such fame was in many ways bitter and placed a heavy burden on the author. For several decades he has been the target of the harshest and most severe criticism. Often the concept of "normal science" and the "scientific revolution" as a "Gestalt switch" was declared ridiculous and absurd. The paper analyses three lines of criticism of Kuhn's concept: the first came from practicing scientists, the second from specialists in the philosophy of science (primarily proponents of "critical rationalism"), and the third from the field of social epistemology. Reproaches about the political bias of Kuhn's concept were taken to extremes, since his views were widely popular. In our opinion, Kuhn should be called a victim of spontaneous hypercriticism. This circumstance did not allow him to improve the original model of scientific revolutions. In this respect, replacing the concept of "paradigm" with the concept of "disciplinary matrix" was a step backwards, not forwards. However, it is impossible to deny that in the field of the historiography of science, he acted as a real reformer. With the courage of Don Quixote, he defended the rights of historical reconstruction, the preservation of the historical past of science, which should not be completely assimilated within the framework of the modern system of knowledge. His motto was - "penetrate the minds of other people who lived in the past." He boldly argued that in the process of historical development, science changes not only ideas about the object of knowledge (representations of the object), but also the reference of its ideas and concepts. Such a formulation of the question has not yet been fully reflected in modern epistemological concepts.

Published

2023-05-03

Issue

Section

Epistemology and Cognition

How to Cite

[1]
2023. From "paradigm" to "disciplinary matrix": a fatal step. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 59, 4 (May 2023), 73–91. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202259459.