The Copernican Hypotheses Part 2
The Copernican Hypotheses Part 2
Author(s): Stephen DersleySubject(s): Social Sciences, Sociology, Sociology of Culture
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: N. Copernicus hypothesis; T. S. Kuhn; philosophy of science
Summary/Abstract: The Copernicus constructed by Thomas S. Kuhn in The Copernican Revolution (1957) is a decidedly non-revolutionary astronomer who unwittingly ignited a conceptual revolution in the European worldview. Kuhn’s reading of Copernicus was crucial for his model of science as a deeply conservative discourse, which presented in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962). This essay argues that Kuhn’s construction of Copernicus and depends on the suppression of the most radical aspects of Copernicus’ thinking, such as the assumptions of the Commentariolus(1509-14) and the conception of hypothesis of De Revolutionibus (1543). After comparing hypo-thetical thinking in the writings of Aristotle and Ptolemy, it is suggested that Copernicus’ concep-tual breakthrough was enabled by his rigorous use of hypothetical thinking.
Journal: Journal of Applied Cultural Studies
- Issue Year: 1/2015
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 109-127
- Page Count: 20
- Language: English