Close Menu
NewsPaperWay
    What's Hot
    Politics

    AOC heckled, booed as NYC town hall descends into chaos

    Economy

    The 10 Best Payment Apps of 2023

    WorldNews

    Indian fishing boats to be equipped with transponders to improve maritime security

    Important Pages:
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    NewsPaperWay
    • WorldNews

      Rohingya arrivals exhausting local villages – DW – 12/08/2023

      Visitors to Martin Luther King Jr.’s home stop a woman from setting fire to it : NPR

      Verdict expected in teacher murder trial – DW – 12/08/2023

      Latest news on Russia and the war in Ukraine

      Advocates say a Mexican startup is illegally selling a health drink from an endangered fish

    • Politics

      Why James Lankford thinks he can secure the border, aid Ukraine, and win Democratic vote

      Sen. Kevin Cramer’s Son Charged With Manslaughter In Crash That Killed North Dakota Deputy

      North Dakota senator’s son charged with manslaughter in police chase that killed an officer

      Hunter Biden to be Indicted in California

      Judge Says Pregnant Texas Woman Can Get Emergency Abortion

    • Business

      The 10 Best Apps for YouTube Creators

      PGA Tour star Jon Rahm signs with Saudi-backed LIV

      What It Really Takes to Become an Executive Coach

      12 Crafts to Make and Sell for Profit

      Wonka, Color Purple, Aquaman box office crucial for Hollywood

    • Economy

      Daniel Craig, Charlize Theron Team for ‘Two For The Money’ at Appe

      Spousal Benefits: Learn How to Make the Most of Social Security if You Are Married

      Your Year End Retirement Checklist: Put 2023 Behind You and Prepare for a Great 2024 and Beyond

      U.S. sanctions money lending network to Houthi rebels in Yemen, tied to Iranian oil sales

      Beer can sales at local brewery raise money for Bristol police memorial – NBC Connecticut

    • Cryptocurrency

      Ethereum Price Soars To Over $2,300

      XRP Whale Moves 45 Mln XRP As Price Plunges, What’s Happening?

      Play Our 2023 NewsPaperWay. Pub Quiz!

      Psychological Biases, Risks, and Rewards

      This BRC-20 Token Just Breached $1 Billion Market Cap

    • Science

      Why I’ve been somewhat obsessed with space-time this year

      The moon may enter a new geological period thanks to human activity

      Fungi join the list of organisms that can control when ice forms

      Particle Physicists Offer a Road Map For the Next Decade

      Warming oceans could thaw trapped ‘fire-ice’

    • Technology

      Apple Wallet ticket sharing is becoming more like NameDrop

      Anthropic’s latest tactic to stop racist AI: Asking it ‘really really really really’ nicely

      Queen-Size Mattresses: Who They’re Best for and What You Need to Know Before Buying

      Motorola brings premium design and cinematic experiences more accessible with the new moto g84 5G

      Understanding Optical Character Recognition (OCR): Revolutionizing Text Digitization

    • Sports

      Washington Nationals news & notes: GM Mike Rizzo & Davey Martinez on HR power, third & first base…

      Chris Godwin’s Wife Accuses Todd Bowles Of Lying

      Washington Nationals news & notes: 2023 MLB Winter Meetings Day 1…

      2024 QB Draft Class May Not Be As Robust As Expected

      Washington Nationals news & notes: Yohandy Morales at No. 40 thrilled Nats’ front office…

    NewsPaperWay
    Home » Globalism vs. the scientific revolution
    Science

    Globalism vs. the scientific revolution

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp


    Image of a line drawing of a person in medieval clothing measuring a sphere.

    How did science get started? A few years back, we looked at one answer to that question in the form of a book called The Invention of Science. In it, British historian David Wootton places the origin within a few centuries of European history in which the features of modern science—experiments, models and laws, peer review—were gradually aggregated into a formal process of organized discovery.

    But that answer is exquisitely sensitive to how science is defined. A huge range of cultures engaged in organized observations of the natural world and tried to identify patterns in what they saw. In a recent book called Horizons, James Poskett places these efforts firmly within the realm of science and arrives at his subtitle: “The global origins of modern science.” He de-emphasizes the role of Europe and directly dismisses Wootton’s book via footnote in the process.

    Whether you find Poskett’s broad definition of science compelling will go a long way to explain how you feel about the first third of the book. The remaining two-thirds, however, are a welcome reminder that, wherever it may have started, science quickly grew into an international effort and matured in conversation with international cultural trends like colonialism, nationalism, and Cold War ideologies.

    Thinking broadly

    Poskett waits all of one paragraph before declaring it a “myth” that science’s origin involved figures like Copernicus and Galileo. Instead, he places it not so much elsewhere as nearly everywhere—in astronomical observatories along the Silk Road and in Arabic countries, in catalogs of Western Hemisphere plants by the Aztecs, and in other efforts that were made to record what people had seen of the natural world.

    Some of those efforts, as Poskett makes clear, required the organized production of information that we see in modern science. Early astronomical observatories boosted accuracy by constructing enormous buildings structured to enable the measurement of the position of heavenly bodies—hugely expensive projects that often required some form of royal patronage. Records were kept over time and were disseminated to other countries and cultures, another commonality with modern science. Some of this activity dates back all the way to Babylon.

    Advertisement

    Yet all this information production is still missing some things that are commonly seen as central to science. Astronomers in many countries figured out ways of calculating the patterns in the movements of planets and timing of eclipses. But there’s little indication that any of them recognized that those patterns reflected a small number of underlying principles or that their predictions could be improved by creating a mental picture of what was happening in the heavens. Without things like models and laws to pair with the observations they explain, can we really call this science?

    Poskett’s answer would be a decisive yes, though there’s no indication in this book that he ever considered that a question in the first place. In fact, his definition of science is even broader (and probably on even weaker ground) when he refers to things like an Aztec herbalism manual as science. Is there any evidence that the herbs it described were effective against the maladies they were used to treat? Finding that out is definitely something science could do. Yet it would require scientific staples like experiments and controls, and there is no indication that the Aztecs ever considered those approaches. Poskett’s choice of using it as an example seems to highlight how organized knowledge on its own isn’t enough to qualify as science.

    A full perspective on the origin of science will necessarily recognize that many non-European cultures had developed better observations and more sophisticated math centuries before figures like Galileo and Copernicus and that access to these observations was critical to the eventual development of what we now recognize as science. But a compelling argument can be made that these alone aren’t sufficient to be called science. It would have been interesting to read an equally compelling counter-argument. But in Horizons, Poskett doesn’t even try to formulate one—he simply declares all of this science by fiat.

    (I’ll note that, by the more stringent definition, even figures like Copernicus weren’t actually doing science, even though they made critical contributions to it. Copernicus lacked any mechanism to explain the motions of the planets in his heliocentric model and was remarkably vague about whether he thought that model was in any way reflective of reality. So someone with a stringent view of what constitutes science would probably agree with Poskett that describing Copernicus as one of the first scientists is a myth. They’d just do so for very different reasons.)



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Science

    Why I’ve been somewhat obsessed with space-time this year

    Science

    The moon may enter a new geological period thanks to human activity

    Science

    Fungi join the list of organisms that can control when ice forms

    Science

    Particle Physicists Offer a Road Map For the Next Decade

    Science

    Warming oceans could thaw trapped ‘fire-ice’

    Science

    Jennifer Doudna Believes Crispr Is for Everyone

    Science

    Why adding water when you grind coffee beans makes for a better brew

    Science

    Roo-ver: Australia’s first moon rover has name chosen in public vote

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Our Picks
    Cryptocurrency

    Blockchain builder Ava Labs partners with Korea’s SK Planet to expand Asia footprint

    Ava Labs, a company that launched the layer-1 blockchain Avalanche, has partnered with SK Planet,…

    NEPA Gives Day upcoming to raise money

    Meta is reportedly working on a new AI model to rival GPT-4

    Pakistan mourns victims of capsized boat on Greek coast – DW – 06/18/2023

    [Good Deal] Motorola Razr 2022 dips under a grand

    NewsPaperWay is a Professional World News Blog. Here we will provide you with only exciting content that you will enjoy and find useful. We’re working to turn our passion into a successful website. We hope you enjoy our Content as much as we enjoy offering them to you.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Categories
    • Business (1,013)
    • Cryptocurrency (1,051)
    • Economy (746)
    • Politics (1,101)
    • Science (916)
    • Sports (443)
    • Technology (853)
    • WorldNews (2,117)
    Today's Picks
    WorldNews

    Sharri Markson, Sky News host in tears over Hamas attack on Israeli civilians

    WorldNews

    Latest news on Russia and the war in Ukraine

    WorldNews

    US wants ‘stable’ ties with China, commerce secretary says – DW – 08/28/2023

    Economy

    SoCal Street Vendors Demand Money Back After Paying Thousands For A Festival That Was Shut Down Before It Started ~ L.A. TACO

    © 2023 NewsPaperWay.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.