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Reduction, Integration, and the Unity of Science: Natural, Behavioral, and Social Sciences and the Humanities

January 1, 2007 | Public Programs, Informal/Formal Connections
The notion that science is unified in one way or another dates back at least to Aristotle, though unity claims since then have been diverse and va riously motivated. By way of introduction to the modern discussion of unity, disunity, and integration, in this first section we examine five historical attempts to unify knowledge: Aristotle’s metaphysical and hierarchical unity; the Enlightenment project of the French Encyclopedists; the systematic unity of Naturphilosophen Lorenz Oken; the methodological unity of the Vienna School’s Encyclopedia of Unified Science; and finally, the organizational unity of cybernetics and general systems theory. We treat these unification projects not only as context, but also because, as we shall see, something of their momentum carries over into the modern discussion.

TEAM MEMBERS

  • William Bechtel
    Author
    University of California, San Diego
  • Andrew Hamilton
    Author
    University of California, San Diego
  • Citation

    Publication Name: Philosopy of Science: Focal Issues
    Volume: Volume 1 of the Handbook of the Philosophy of Science
    Resource Type: Edited Chapter
    Discipline: General STEM | Life science | Nature of science | Social science and psychology
    Audience: General Public | Educators/Teachers | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Public Programs | Informal/Formal Connections

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