Results 11 to 20 of about 48,399 (259)
Scientific revolution in dentistry [PDF]
In his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Thomas Kuhn argued that a scientific revolution takes place as the result of an episode of noncumulative changes where one paradigm is replaced in whole or in part. Kuhn observed that the process of a scientific revolution begins with an existing paradigm, during which normal science is performed ...
Yun JH.
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The Problem of Forms of Completing the Copernicus Revolution in Modern Cartesian Science [PDF]
Due to the opinion that philosophy of the Modern Age might be considered as uncompleted Copernicus revolution, the purpose of this paper is to outline the main points of manifestation of anthropology in early Descartes’ writings.
Volodymyr Khmil, Anatolii Malivskyi
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The Scientific Revolution: An Encyclopedia.
The article reviews the book The Scientific Revolution: An Encyclopedia, by William E. Burns.
Ann M. Jensen
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Scientific Revolution in Accounting: Paradigm Shift Towards the Use of Fair Values [PDF]
The controversy surrounding the scientific or artistic nature of accounting has been the subject of various scientific circles for years, and the source of such debates is the fundamental difference between accounting and natural sciences such as physics,
Hamidreza Hajeb +2 more
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Artificial intelligence as the new frontier in chemical risk assessment
The rapid progress of AI impacts various areas of life, including toxicology, and promises a major role for AI in future risk assessments. Toxicology has shifted from a purely empirical science focused on observing chemical exposure outcomes to a data ...
Thomas Hartung, Thomas Hartung
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From Galileo to Navier and Clapeyron
Galileo (1564-1642), in his well-known Discorsi (Galileo, 1638), briefly turning his attention to the fracture of a beam, starts an interesting discussion on the beam’s breakage as well as its location. Could the section and breaking point of a beam have
Josep Maria Pons
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The original view of Joseph Życiński, presented in his book The Structure of the Metascientific Revolution (1988), boils down to the observation that almost before our eyes a great revolution took place, not in science, but in the philosophy of science ...
Michał Heller, Janusz Mączka
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Historical-epistemological notes. Sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
the purpose of this paper is to discuss some epistemological aspects that are important to understand the historical progress of science throughout the 16th and 17th centuries.
Jorge William Montoya Santamaría
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“I didn’t really think about it ” (M. Planck and the Quantum Revolution)
Introduction. In the philosophy of science great attention is traditionally paid to theoretical knowledge. However, scientific theories are considered, as a rule, as something already formed, whereas the analysis of the birth and formation of the theory ...
I. S. Dmitriev
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Teleology without Dichotomies: beyond the Separation of Knowledge and Experience
This paper aims to show how a teleological model of reality and knowledge can be of aid in order to understand the connection between objective knowledge and subjective experience.
Antonio Lizzadri
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