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dc.rights.licenseIn Copyrighten_US
dc.creatorGebauer, Maximilian James
dc.date.accessioned2022-05-05T12:32:00Z
dc.date.available2022-05-05T12:32:00Z
dc.date.created2022
dc.identifierWLURG38_Gebauer_PHIL_2022
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11021/35848
dc.descriptionThesis; [FULL-TEXT FREELY AVAILABLE ONLINE]en_US
dc.descriptionMaximilian James Gebauer is a member of the Class of 2022 of Washington and Lee University.en_US
dc.description.abstractThomas S. Kuhn's contributions to the philosophy of science are among the most prominent and contentious of the 20th century; his Structure of Scientific Revolutions remains one of the most cited philosophical works in recent history, and it has had an impact on historians, literary theorists, political sciences, and sociologists, also. In this work, Kuhn first laid out his incommensurability thesis: theoretical statements from an older scientific paradigm can be untranslatable into those of a later paradigm. Kuhn spent much of his professional life reformulating this thesis, ultimately giving it an explicitly linguistic form that he termed "taxonomic incommensurability." A large body of secondary literature has developed to explicate and defend various phases of the development of the incommensurability thesis, with several prominent schools utilizing the resources of psychology and cognitive science to provide a naturalized defense of the thesis. This paper's purpose is threefold: to survey the evolution of the incommensurability thesis over the course of Kuhn's career, to explicate the two major schools of secondary literature that refine and defend Kuhnian incommensurability, those being the dynamic-frames account popularized by Andresen, Baker and Chen (ABC) and Alexander Bird's naturalized psychological account, and ultimately to argue that Bird's account, supplemented by Paul Churchland's work on the structure of the brain and its development, is both preferable to ABC's on theoretical grounds and represents a genuine explication of Kuhnian incommensurability as opposed to an independent conception of incommensurability that is only loosely related to Kuhn's version. [From Introduction]en_US
dc.format.extent37 pagesen_US
dc.language.isoen_USen_US
dc.rightsThis material is made available for use in research, teaching, and private study, pursuant to U.S. Copyright law. The user assumes full responsibility for any use of the materials, including but not limited to, infringement of copyright and publication rights of reproduced materials. Any materials used should be fully credited with the source.en_US
dc.rights.urihttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/en_US
dc.subject.otherWashington and Lee University -- Honors in Philosophyen_US
dc.titleIncommensurability Reassessed: The Cognitive Science Foundations of World-View (In)comparability (thesis)en_US
dc.typeTexten_US
dcterms.isPartOfRG38 - Student Papers
dc.rights.holderGebauer, Maximilian James
dc.subject.fastStructure of scientific revolutions (Kuhn, Thomas S.)en_US
dc.subject.fastWorld viewsen_US
dc.subject.fastPhilosophy and cognitive scienceen_US
dc.subject.fastBird, Alexander James, 1964-en_US
local.departmentPhilosophyen_US
local.scholarshiptypeHonors Thesisen_US


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