Ernst Mayr’s Critique of Thomas Kuhn

Authors

  • Georgy S. Levit Friedrich Schiller University Jena
  • Uwe Hossfeld Friedrich Schiller University Jena

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202259463

Keywords:

Ernst Mayr, Thomas Kuhn, history of evolutionary theory, Darwinism, alternative evolutionary theories, philosophy of biology

Abstract

In the early 1960s, American philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn contributed to a “crisis of rationality” with his hypothesis that science develops by means of paradigm shifts. He challenged the positivist concept of cumulative and continuous scientific progress. According to Kuhn, the relation between two succeeding scientific traditions ‘separated by a scientific revolution’ is characterized by conceptual incommensurability that constrains the interpretation of science as a cumulative, steadily progressing enterprise. Thomas Kuhn’s philosophy was heavily criticized by German-American biologist Ernst Mayr as unapplicable to the history of biology. Mayr, one of the most outstanding evolutionary biologists of the 20th century and a “co-architect” of the so-called Modern Synthesis (contemporary Darwinism), published extensively on the history and philosophy of biology as he thought that theoretical biology cannot progress without proper philosophy of science. Being convinced of the progressive development of Darwinism, Mayr pointed out that Kuhn’s concept of scientific revolutions does not reflect conceptual changes in evolutionary biology. Here we summarize Mayr’s critiques of Kuhn and, based on our own research, take Mayr’s side in the controversy between two great thinkers.

Published

2023-05-03

Issue

Section

Interdisciplinary Studies

How to Cite

[1]
2023. Ernst Mayr’s Critique of Thomas Kuhn. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 59, 4 (May 2023), 163–180. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202259463.