Difference between revisions of "Thomas Kuhn"
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|description=A historian of science. | |description=A historian of science. | ||
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=More information about this person in Free Form= | =More information about this person in Free Form= | ||
Thomas Kuhn's book on The Structure of Scientific Revolution<ref>{{: | Thomas Kuhn's book on The Structure of Scientific Revolution<ref>{{:Book/The Structure of Scientific Revolutions}}</ref>,<ref>{{:Book/科学革命的结构}}</ref> is a well known classic since late 20th century. The ideas in the book provides a framework to deal with data management at many scales. Having been trained as a theoretical physicist, Kuhn was well-versed in both physical science and the social dynamics amongst scientific community members. This insight across multiple layers provides him with a way to articulate the structural patterns of scientific revolutions. It is important to note that he explicitly stated that '''revolutions''' in plural form. This means that revolutions will happen many times over. | ||
==Applications of Kuhn's Work== | |||
One of the more famous idea about Kuhn's work is [[Kuhn Cycle]]. This idea directly maps to the [[DevOps]] cycles of modern information technology infrastructures. The idea about [[data dictionary]] in [[software engineering]] can be related to Kuhn's notion of [[incommensurability]]. Therefore, creating a living dictionary that keeps evolving and allows many participants to define its terms overtime, continuously, is similar to what [[MediaWiki]], [[Wikipedia]] and [[Wikimedia]] as concrete operationalized cases that fit Kuhn's abstract framework. [[Yuan Xun]] told me that [[Kuhn]]'s [[paradigm shift]] idea was influenced by [[Paul Feyerabend]] | |||
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Latest revision as of 23:58, 9 August 2022
Thomas Kuhn | |
---|---|
First Name | Thomas |
Last Name | Kuhn |
Wikipedia | Thomas Kuhn |
wikidata | Q184980 |
Gender | Male |
Birthday | July 18, 1922 |
Died | June 17, 1996 |
This person's name is Thomas Kuhn.
Short Bio
A historian of science.
More information about this person in Free Form
Thomas Kuhn's book on The Structure of Scientific Revolution[1],[2] is a well known classic since late 20th century. The ideas in the book provides a framework to deal with data management at many scales. Having been trained as a theoretical physicist, Kuhn was well-versed in both physical science and the social dynamics amongst scientific community members. This insight across multiple layers provides him with a way to articulate the structural patterns of scientific revolutions. It is important to note that he explicitly stated that revolutions in plural form. This means that revolutions will happen many times over.
Applications of Kuhn's Work
One of the more famous idea about Kuhn's work is Kuhn Cycle. This idea directly maps to the DevOps cycles of modern information technology infrastructures. The idea about data dictionary in software engineering can be related to Kuhn's notion of incommensurability. Therefore, creating a living dictionary that keeps evolving and allows many participants to define its terms overtime, continuously, is similar to what MediaWiki, Wikipedia and Wikimedia as concrete operationalized cases that fit Kuhn's abstract framework. Yuan Xun told me that Kuhn's paradigm shift idea was influenced by Paul Feyerabend
References
- ↑ Kuhn, Thomas (2012). The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (50th Anniversary ed.). local page: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-45811-3.
- ↑ Kuhn, Thomas (2012). 科学革命的结构. Translated by 金吾伦; 胡新和 (4th ed.). local page: 北京大学出版社. ISBN 978-7-301-21426-8.
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