| Frederick Suppe - 1977 - 854 pages
...is replaced in whole or in part by an incompatible new one," 202 where paradigms are defined to be "accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...theory, application, and instrumentation together — [which] provide models from which spring particular coherent traditions of scientific research."... | |
| D. N. Perkins - 1981 - 328 pages
...Scientific Revolutions with the concept of a paradigm. By that term he wants "to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice -...particular coherent traditions of scientific research." Examples of these traditions include Newtonian mechanics, Copernican astronomy, and the newer paradigm... | |
| Walter L. Wallace - 578 pages
...substantive integration seems to be what Kuhn has in mind when he refers to disciplinary "paradigms" as "accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...theory, application, and instrumentation together — [that] provide models from which spring particular coherent traditions of scientific research"... | |
| George N. Katsiaficas - 1987 - 352 pages
...Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago, 1970), paradigms are defined as "some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...law, theory, application and instrumentation together — (which) provide models from which spring particular coherent traditions of scientific research"... | |
| Johann Mouton, H. C. Marais - 1988 - 300 pages
...Kuhn refers to these achievements as paradigms. By choosing (paradigms), I mean to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...particular coherent traditions of scientific research (1970: 10). Normal science may, therefore, be defined as the practice of scientific research within,... | |
| Leland Gerson Neuberg - 1989 - 396 pages
...also seeks to formalize the formal i /able elements of Kuhn's ( 1 970) concept of "paradigm": "some accepted examples of actual scientific practice -...theory, application, and instrumentation together" (p. 10). Pendulum period «IU"2 Kepler's laws Newion's Firsi Law Newion s Third Law RSA, Assumpiions... | |
| Lynn Nelson - 2010 - 414 pages
...acknowledges for a time as supplying the foundation for future practice. . . . I mean to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...models from which spring particular coherent traditions for scientific research.5" [In a science, a paradigm] is like an accepted judicial decision in the... | |
| James Franklin Harris - 1992 - 252 pages
...solutions.7 In one of his earliest characterizations of a paradigm, Kühn says, I mean to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...spring particular coherent traditions of scientific research.8 Such a paradigm becomes established when it is successful enough to attract a group of scientific... | |
| J. J. Snyman - 1993 - 368 pages
...research. These "achievements" Kuhn calls paradigms. By choosing it (paradigms) I mean to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...particular coherent traditions of scientific research (1970:10). Normal scientific practice can therefore be defined as the execution of scientific research... | |
| Barbara Von Eckardt - 1995 - 490 pages
...'paradigms', a term that relates closely to 'normal science'. By choosing it, I mean to suggest that some accepted examples of actual scientific practice —...particular coherent traditions of scientific research, (p. 10) Now, it seems perfectly clear from this passage roughly what sort ofthing a paradigm is supposed... | |
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