| Maurice Dobb - 1975 - 308 lapas
...indeed, "a sign of maturity in the development of any given scientific field" (ibid., p. 11). These paradigms "gain their status because they are more...solving a few problems that the group of practitioners have come to recognise as acute"; at the same time "normal-scientific research is directed to the articulation... | |
| William J. Doherty, Marvin B. Sussman - 1987 - 262 lapas
...researchers supporting the new concepts may be viewed with suspicion by their scientific colleagues. Paradigms gain their status because they are more...group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute, (p. 23) If a paradigm is ever to triumph it must gain some first supporters, men (sic) who will develop... | |
| Ulrich Ch. M. Thilo - 1989 - 236 lapas
...gegenüber anderen besonders zur adäquaten Lösung konkreter Probleme effektiv beizutragen verspricht: "Paradigms gain their Status because they are more...that the group of practitioners has come to recognize äs acute. To be more successful is not, however, to be either completely successful with a single... | |
| 1984 - 116 lapas
...alternative explanations which might arise is due, he says, to its ability to answer critical questions: "Paradigms gain their status because they are more...the group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute."1 explore in light of Kuhn's work. The definition of written material as "text" rather than... | |
| Martin L. Davies - 1995 - 374 lapas
...and function of normal science; this consists in the actualization of that promise [ie of success, in solving a few problems that the group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute], an actualization achieved by extending the knowledge of those facts that the paradigm displays as particularly... | |
| Joyce Oldham Appleby - 1996 - 578 lapas
...how very limited in both scope and precision a paradigm can be at the time of its first appearance. Paradigms gain their status because they are more...group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute. To be more successful is not, however, to be either completely successful with a single problem or... | |
| Massimo Craglia, H. Couclelis - 1997 - 638 lapas
...everyone's lips and is now perceived to be one of the primary paradigms of mathematics (Stewart, 1989). Paradigms 'gain their status because they are more...problems that the group of practitioners has come to recognise as acute' (Kuhn, 1970, p. 23). In effect The study of paradigms ... is what mainly prepares... | |
| David Dreman - 2008 - 473 lapas
...paradigm is the body of knowledge that is used as a frame of reference from which to conduct new work. "Paradigms gain their status because they are more...the group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute."34 Thus, efficient markets in the early years provided the explanation of prices fluctuating... | |
| Carl Schneider - 1998 - 346 lapas
...dominated by one paradigm — the autonomy of the patient. "Paradigms," Thomas Kuhn famously said, "gain their status because they are more successful...the group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute."1 Bioethics was born out of a crisis of imperialism in biomedical research and medical treatment.2... | |
| Brenda Jo Brueggemann - 1999 - 310 lapas
...best, abhorrent at worst. But paradigms can be like that. They "gain their status," Kuhn tells us, "because they are more successful than their competitors...group of practitioners has come to recognize as acute" (my emphasis). 33 If there are three reasons for not wearing hearing aids in the paradigm of current... | |
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