[长期科学史:论科学学科的灵活性和脆弱性]。

Studium (Rotterdam, Netherlands) Pub Date : 2011-01-01
Daan Wegener
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引用次数: 0

摘要

大多数科学学科,如化学、生物学和物理学,现在都有大约两个世纪的历史。本文以物理学为例,旨在解释这种长寿的原因。从19世纪早期开始,是什么使物理学学科保持在一起?关于物理学兴起的文献表明,这门学科是围绕能量、以太或其他理论概念形成的。然而,20世纪物理学的革命表明,即使没有一些最“基本”的概念,这门学科也能繁荣发展。因此,一些学者得出结论,内部因素是不相关的,学科的同一性和连续性纯粹是制度性的。本文借鉴了托马斯•库恩、彼得•加里森和安德鲁•沃里克的研究成果,为一种不同的观点辩护。虽然没有学科的智力核心,但没有某种程度的内在连续性,就无法解释学科的长期存在。如果在理论层面上发生了革命,那么在实验实践层面上可能仍然存在连续性(反之亦然)。正是这种灵活性解释了学科可以适应不同环境的事实。此外,需要一种教育传统来将知识从一代传给下一代。
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[Long-term history of science: on the flexibility and fragility of scientific disciplines].

Most scientific disciplines, such as chemistry, biology and physics, are now about two centuries old. Using physics as a case study the present paper aims to account for this longevity. What kept the physics discipline together from the early nineteenth century onwards? Literature on the rise of physics suggests that the discipline was formed around energy, the ether, or other theoretical notions. Yet the twentieth-century revolutions in physics showed that the discipline could prosper without some of its most 'fundamental' concepts. Some scholars conclude that internal factors are therefore irrelevant and disciplinary identity and continuity are purely institutional. Drawing on the work of Thomas Kuhn, Peter Galison and Andrew Warwick, this paper defends a different point of view. Although there is no intellectual core of disciplines, the prolonged existence of disciplines cannot be explained without some degree of internal continuity. If there is a revolution of a theoretical level, there may still be continuity on the level of experimental practices (and vice versa). It is this flexibility that accounts for the fact that disciplines may adapt to different circumstances. In addition, an educational tradition is required to transmit knowledge from one generation to the next.

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