• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Science, Philosophy, and Society: Some Recent Books
  • Beteiligte: Holtzman, Eric
  • Erschienen: SAGE Publications, 1981
  • Erschienen in: International Journal of Health Services
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.2190/l5eu-e7pc-hxg6-euml
  • ISSN: 0020-7314; 1541-4469
  • Schlagwörter: Health Policy
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  • Anmerkungen:
  • Beschreibung: <jats:p> This essay discusses a number of issues developed in several recent books on philosophical and ethical problems in the natural sciences, both pure (especially biology) and applied (especially medicine). The scaffolding of the discussion can be outlined as follows: Science is most coherently portrayed as a set of activities through which societies deal with a distinctive, but continually evolving set of interwoven practical, empirical, and conceptual problems. Consequently, approaches which attempt to delineate universal features of “scientific methods” or to depict the sciences as providing an approximation to an “objective” view of reality are much less enlightening than are analyses rooted directly in concrete scientific history and in the actual interplay of science with other social configurations. However, scientists are granted some meaningful autonomy in exercising their “curiosity” and there is a real sense in which scientific ideas and activities do possess momentum of their own. In other words, as is also true for other spheres, such as the arts, it is important not to fall into mechanical viewpoints which treat the movement of science as simply a derivative of forces generated elsewhere. </jats:p>