Thomas Kuhn Community Quotations
Thomas Kuhn Quotes about:
Community Quotes from:
- All Community Quotes
- Hillary Clinton
- Wendell Berry
- Kofi Annan
- Henri Nouwen
- Pope Francis
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer
- Jean Vanier
- Donald Trump
- Terry Tempest Williams
- Albert Einstein
- Dalai Lama
- Mark Regev
- Noam Chomsky
- Sandra Cisneros
- E B White
- Martin Luther King Jr
- Simon Mainwaring
- Adolf Hitler
- John Dewey
- Bell Hooks
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Commitment Quotes
Normal science, the activity in which most scientists inevitably spend most all their time, is predicated on the assumption that the scientific community knows what the world is like. Normal science, often suppresses fundamental novelties because they are necessarily subversive of its basic commitments. As a puzzle-solving activity, normal science does not aim at novelties of fact or theory and, when successful, finds none.
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Light Quotes
The historian of science may be tempted to claim that when paradigms change, the world itself changes with them. Led by a new paradigm, scientists adopt new instruments and look in new places. even more important, during revolutions, scientists see new and different things when looking with familiar instruments in places they have looked before. It is rather as if the professional community had been suddenly transported to another planet where familiar objects are seen in a different light and are joined by unfamiliar ones as well.
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Practice Quotes
The resolution of revolutions is selection by conflict within the scientific community of the fittest way to practice future science. The net result of a sequence of such revolutionary selections, separated by periods of normal research, is the wonderfully adapted set of instruments we call modern scientific knowledge.
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Knowledge Quotes
Groups do not have experiences except insofar as all their members do. And there are no experiences... that all the members of a scientific community must share in the course of a [scientific] revolution. Revolutions should be described not in terms of group experience but in terms of the varied experiences of individual group members. Indeed, that variety itself turns out to play an essential role in the evolution of scientific knowledge.