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- The Incommensurability of Scientific Theories (Stanford Encyclopedia of . . .
In the influential The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962), Kuhn made the dramatic claim that history of science reveals proponents of competing paradigms failing to make complete contact with each other’s views, so that they are always talking at least slightly at cross-purposes
- Commensurability (philosophy of science) - Wikipedia
In 1962, Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend both independently introduced the idea of incommensurability to the philosophy of science
- Incommensurability in Science - numberanalytics. com
Incommensurability, a concept that has garnered significant attention in the philosophy of science, refers to the inability to compare or measure two or more entities using a common standard or metric
- Incommensurables | Philosophy, Mathematics Physics | Britannica
The geometers immediately following Pythagoras (c 580–c 500 bc) shared the unsound intuition that any two lengths are “commensurable” (that is, measurable) by integer multiples of some common unit
- INCOMMENSURABLE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of INCOMMENSURABLE is not commensurable; broadly : lacking a basis of comparison in respect to a quality normally subject to comparison Did you know?
- Incommensurability in Science - Philosophy - Oxford Bibliographies
Feyerabend first used the term “incommensurable” in 1962 to characterize the relationship between the concepts of universal scientific theories interpreted realistically, claiming that they have no common measure
- INCOMMENSURABLE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
INCOMMENSURABLE definition: 1 not able to be compared or judged by the same measure or standard: 2 not able to be compared… Learn more
- INCOMMENSURABILITY, INCOMPARABILITY, IRRATIONALITY
Since its introduction in the field of philosophy of science, incommensurability has been taken to imply, almost analytically, incomparability and irrationality
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