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dc.contributor.advisorEsther, Ramani
dc.contributor.authorNarasimhan, M G
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-01T09:39:17Z
dc.date.available2025-12-01T09:39:17Z
dc.date.submitted1994
dc.identifier.urihttps://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/7557
dc.description.abstractThe focus of our analysis so far has been to demonstrate that the history of the science of science has been marked by a gradual broadening of its concerns. Initially, the exclusive attention of positivism to the logic immanent in scientific growth was modified-first by rationalist reconstructionists, and later by sociologists. This broadening of scope enabled metascientists to give due importance to the cognitive content, temporal processes, and community participation associated with the growth of science. There is no category like scientific controversy that significantly encompasses all these factors. Hence, we argue in favor of using this category to explain the dynamics of scientific progress. We devote the next chapter to a detailed treatment of the concept of controversy in science. McMullin's non-positivist historiography provides an adequate framework for analyzing the role of controversies in scientific growth. McMullin’s framework is composite and avoids all forms of apriorism, both rational and social. This approach is especially suitable because controversies in science are complex human events that cannot be reduced to any single explanatory strategy. As McMullin (1984) puts it: "Somewhere between the extremes of PSR (Presumption of Standard Rationality) and PUS (Principle of Unrestricted Sociality), the working historian will continue to ply his trade, taking each case as it comes and ignoring the prescriptions of philosophers and sociologists... what is needed is a detailed and historically sensitive analysis of reasons and motives, in which the status of neither the rational nor the social is ever taken for granted." (p.159; emphasis added) We now present an illustrative case study of a controversy in biosciences. In the course of this study, we show how a controversy arises from a conflict between two sets of beliefs-one paradigm-preserving and the other paradigm-challenging. In the next and concluding chapter, we present a heuristic analysis of the structure of the controversy using McMullin’s framework. We also demonstrate the relevance of studying scientific controversy to our understanding of the nature and growth of scientific knowledge.
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesT03629
dc.rightsI grant Indian Institute of Science the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in all forms of media, now hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation
dc.subjectHistoriography of Science
dc.subjectRationality vs. Sociality
dc.subjectHeuristic Analysis
dc.titleControversy as a explanatory category in scientific metatheory: an argument & an illustration
dc.typeThesis
dc.degree.namePhD
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.grantorIndian Institute of Science
dc.degree.disciplineEngineering


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