One of my reading committee members recommended this book to me as I was getting his signature for my thesis. He knew my interest in the philosophy of science and told me that I HAD to read this book because it makes clear how scientific advancements evolve along with the process of scientific discoveries. Not long after that encounter, I bought the book with the greatest of intentions.
It sat in a prominent place in my bookshelf for years. It
travelled with me across the country from job to job, city to city. It was
always on my To Be Read list and prominent in my psyche. I finally got around
to sit down to reading it as I entered the latter part of my engineering career.
In some ways, I thought that since I was participating in the evolving
scientific process as an engineer, I was creating the structure of the
scientific revolution. It wasn’t until after I became more experienced that I
sensed the rhythm of the evolution of science and engineering that I realized
that this book should have been read long ago. It was also during that period that
I became aware that the structure that Kuhn describes happens to everything
that goes through both evolutionary and revolutionary changes, which is just
about everything.
As Kuhn lays out the steps of his structure, emphasizes that
the step to a revolution is benignly unspectacular, until the exceptions to the
rule stack up, where our scientific dogmas from accumulated historical
perceptions are increasing violated by reality. Kuhn takes a fine scalpel to
our accepted beliefs that make up the normal sciences. Kuhn terms these
accepted beliefs paradigms. They are more than just beliefs however;
these are conjectures and derived knowledge that had been determined to be true
through empirical verification. Kuhn is very careful with his argument, as a
practiced philosopher does. He steps through his structure in fine granularity,
and he tries to anticipate objections, using salient scientific history of
ideas to illustrate his assertions. This is not just a philosophical treatise
but also a review of scientific history that frames his structure, most notably
the Copernican revolution as compared to the Ptolemaic ideas. One hundred and
seventy-three pages devoted to outlining his structure, but mostly to convince
the reader, through examples and logic, that this structure is not just a
whimsical edifice, fragile and delicate. Instead, Kuhn worked diligently to
convince the reader of the reality of the structure.
The ubiquity of Kuhn’s idea is something that took me by
surprise. This is proof that he has been successful in convincing the world of his
idea. As I was reading the book, my thoughts were not: this is revolutionary.
My thoughts were: of course, that is the way it has always been and should be.
Which proved to me that Kuhn’s ideas were such common sense that no one had
objected to his proposal, or that Kuhn’s ideas had been so seamlessly
integrated into our perspectives that it has been tightly woven into how we
perceive scientific ideas. The phrase “paradigm shift” has so seamlessly been appropriated into our
vocabulary that it is an anchor phrase when discussing changing long held
beliefs; it is so accepted that many humorously and sarcastically skewers the
uninformed user of the term.
Most importantly, Kuhn’s phrases: normal science, anomalies
that challenge the paradigm, and the revolutionary overthrow of paradigms are
deeply ingrained in our psyche when we think of revolutionary changes in the
sciences. It is so ingrained that as I was reading the book I found myself
asking: what’s the big deal? But it is a big deal, it formalizes how scientists
and technologists abstract the methodologies of their field to create more
accurate explanations which are truer to what reality is showing us.
Yet, as I was reading the book, I find myself marveling at the
breadths and depths of Kuhn’s explications. He sought not only to convince the scientists,
but the philosophers and historians.
I read the Enlarged Second edition of Kuhn’s book. It
included an extensive Postscript at the end of the book. The original book was
published in 1962, the Second edition was published in 1970. It is somewhat
surprising that a treatise such as this would get a second edition so quickly,
it indicates that the content of the book is considered to be important enough and
had elicited sufficient interest to warrant the second edition. The postscript by
Kuhn is his opportunity to address his critics and clarify what he thought
needed to be clarified. It is an interesting juxtaposition of his thoughts, a
scant eight years apart.
Since the second edition, the third and fourth editions has
been published, in 1996 and 2012. The 2012 edition is a celebration of the 50th
anniversary of the book’s publication. Since Thomas S. Kuhn passed away, I
suspect that the additions to the fourth edition involve commentaries on the
historical significance of Kuhn’s work, there is also a 2020 edition but does
not seem to indicate it is a new edition.
I am happy that I finally read this book, a book that can be
said to have laid out a framework of scientific advancement in the 20th
century and still have an impact on scientific advancements in the 21st
century. It was not an easy read, I read it chapter by chapter, took copious
amounts of notes — trying to capture the essence of the abstractions, and then
tried to summarize Kuhn’s thoughts in my own words in order to gain better
understanding of the powerful ideas.