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Against Method

Front Cover
26 Reviews
Verso, 1993 - Philosophy - 279 pages
Modern philosophy of science has paid great attention to the understanding of scientific "practice, " in contrast to the earlier concentration on scientific "method." Paul Feyerabend's acclaimed work, which has contributed greatly to this new emphasis, shows the deficiencies of some widespread ideas about the nature of knowledge. He argues that the only feasible explanations of scientific successes are historical explanations, and that anarchism must now replace rationalism in the theory of knowledge.
  

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Review: Against Method: Outline of an Anarchistic Theory of Knowledge

User Review - Goodreads

Against Method, like a lot of the socio-philosophical stuff that came out in the 70s, doesn't really stand up to a modern reading. You can imagine the idea of young(ish) anarchist daring to question ...

Review: Against Method: Outline of an Anarchistic Theory of Knowledge

User Review  - Ari - Goodreads

The basic argument of the book is "the scientific method as taught in schools is routinely ignored in practice and is unworkable in theory. We should stop pretending otherwise." It's of course over ... Read full review

All 23 reviews »

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Contents

Introduction
9
Parts 120 14
67
Postscript on Relativism
268
Copyright

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About the author (1993)

A controversial and influential voice in the philosophy of science, Paul K. Feyerabend was born and educated in Vienna. After military service during World War II and further study at the University of London, he returned to Vienna as a lecturer at the university. In 1959, having taught for several years at Bristol University in England, he came to the United States to join the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley, from which, after numerous visiting appointments elsewhere, he retired in 1990. Since the 1970s, Feyerabend has devoted much of his career to arguing that science as practiced cannot be described, let alone regulated, by any coherent methodology, whether understood historically, as in Thomas Kuhn's use of paradigms, or epistemologically, as in classical positivism and its offspring. He illustrates this stance on the dust jacket of one of his books, Against Method (1975), by publishing his horoscope in the place usually reserved for a biographical sketch of the author. In his entry in the Supplement to Who's Who in America, he is quoted as saying, "Leading intellectuals with their zeal for objectivity are criminals, not the liberators of mankind.

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