[DOWNLOAD] "The Knowledge Machine: How Irrationality Created Modern Science" by Michael Strevens ~ eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: The Knowledge Machine: How Irrationality Created Modern Science
- Author : Michael Strevens
- Release Date : January 13, 2020
- Genre: History,Books,Science & Nature,Nonfiction,Philosophy,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 22602 KB
Description
âThe Knowledge Machine is the most stunningly illuminating book of the last several decades regarding the all-important scientific enterprise.â âRebecca Newberger Goldstein, author of Plato at the Googleplex
A paradigm-shifting work, The Knowledge Machine revolutionizes our understanding of the origins and structure of science.
âą Why is science so powerful?
âą Why did it take so longâtwo thousand years after the invention of philosophy and mathematicsâfor the human race to start using science to learn the secrets of the universe?
In a groundbreaking work that blends science, philosophy, and history, leading philosopher of science Michael Strevens answers these challenging questions, showing how science came about only once thinkers stumbled upon the astonishing idea that scientific breakthroughs could be accomplished by breaking the rules of logical argument.
Like such classic works as Karl Popperâs The Logic of Scientific Discovery and Thomas Kuhnâs The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, The Knowledge Machine grapples with the meaning and origins of science, using a plethora of vivid historical examples to demonstrate that scientists willfully ignore religion, theoretical beauty, and even philosophy to embrace a constricted code of argument whose very narrowness channels unprecedented energy into empirical observation and experimentation. Strevens calls this scientific code the iron rule of explanation, and reveals the way in which the rule, precisely because it is unreasonably close-minded, overcomes individual prejudices to lead humanity inexorably toward the secrets of nature.
âWith a mixture of philosophical and historical argument, and written in an engrossing styleâ (Alan Ryan), The Knowledge Machine provides captivating portraits of some of the greatest luminaries in scienceâs history, including Isaac Newton, the chief architect of modern science and its foundational theories of motion and gravitation; William Whewell, perhaps the greatest philosopher-scientist of the early nineteenth century; and Murray Gell-Mann, discoverer of the quark. Today, Strevens argues, in the face of threats from a changing climate and global pandemics, the idiosyncratic but highly effective scientific knowledge machine must be protected from politicians, commercial interests, and even scientists themselves who seek to open it up, to make it less narrow and more rationalâand thus to undermine its devotedly empirical search for truth.
Rich with illuminating and often delightfully quirky illustrations, The Knowledge Machine, written in a winningly accessible style that belies the import of its revisionist and groundbreaking concepts, radically reframes much of what we thought we knew about the origins of the modern world.