| Charles R. Morris - 2005 - 412 pagine
...the whole range of phenomena, mental as well as physical—the entire universe—is its field. . . . every phase of social life, every stage of past or present development is material for science." There was, in short, no need to jettison the promise of Progress and American exceptionalism, but the... | |
| Hunter Crowther-Heyck - 2005 - 444 pagine
...claims to objectivity was method. As Karl Pearson wrote in his widely read Grammar of Science (1895), "The unity of all science consists alone in its method, not in its material." 119 That is, science is objective (and powerful) because of the procedures scientists employ... | |
| Charles R. Morris - 2006 - 401 pagine
...the whole range of phenomena, mental as well as physical—the entire universe—is its field. . . . every phase of social life, every stage of past or present development is material for science." There was, in short, no need to jettison the promise of Progress and American exceptionalism, but the... | |
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