Skip navigation
Skip navigation

What’s wrong with talking about the Scientific Revolution? Applying lessons from history of science to applied fields of science studies

Orthia, Lindy

Description

Since the mid-twentieth century, the ‘Scientific Revolution’ has arguably occupied centre stage in most westerners’, and many non-westerners’, conceptions of science history. Yet among history of science specialists that position has been profoundly contested. Most radically, historians Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams in 1993 proposed to demolish the prevailing ‘big picture’ which posited that the Scientific Revolution marked the origin of modern science. They proposed a new big picture in...[Show more]

dc.contributor.authorOrthia, Lindy
dc.date.accessioned2016-05-11T23:52:14Z
dc.identifier.citationOrthia L.A. (2016) What’s wrong with talking about the Scientific Revolution? Applying lessons from history of science to applied fields of science studies. Minerva. Prepublished online 10 May 2016, doi: 10.1007/s11024-016-9299-4
dc.identifier.issn0026-4695
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/101211
dc.description.abstractSince the mid-twentieth century, the ‘Scientific Revolution’ has arguably occupied centre stage in most westerners’, and many non-westerners’, conceptions of science history. Yet among history of science specialists that position has been profoundly contested. Most radically, historians Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams in 1993 proposed to demolish the prevailing ‘big picture’ which posited that the Scientific Revolution marked the origin of modern science. They proposed a new big picture in which science is seen as a distinctly modern, western phenomenon rather than a human universal, that it was invented in the Age of Revolutions 1760-1848, and that science be de-centred within the new big picture: treated as just one of many forms of human knowledge-seeking activity. Their paper is one of the most highly cited in the history of science field, and has the potential to transform the way that science educators, science communicators, science policy-makers and scientists view science. Yet the paper and historians’ scholarly response to it are not well-known outside the history discipline. Here I attempt to bridge that disciplinary gap with a review of scholarly papers published 1994-2014 that cited Cunningham and Williams or otherwise discussed the Scientific Revolution, to gauge the extent of support for the old and new big pictures. I find that the old big picture is disintegrating and lacks active defenders, while many scholars support aspects of the new big picture. I discuss the significance of this for scholars in ‘applied’ fields of science studies such as education, communication and policy.
dc.format21 pages
dc.publisherSpringer Verlag
dc.rights© 2016 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
dc.sourceMinerva
dc.subjectHistory of knowledge
dc.subjecthistory of science
dc.subjectnon-western science
dc.subjectscience communication
dc.subjectscience education
dc.subjectscience policy
dc.titleWhat’s wrong with talking about the Scientific Revolution? Applying lessons from history of science to applied fields of science studies
dc.typeJournal article
dcterms.dateAccepted2016-04-19
dc.date.issued2016-05-10
local.publisher.urlhttp://link.springer.com/
local.type.statusAccepted Version
local.contributor.affiliationOrthia, L. A., Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science, The Australian National University
local.identifier.doi10.1007/s11024-016-9299-4
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Access
dc.provenancehttp://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/issn/0026-4695/..."Author's post-print on any open access repository after 12 months after publication" from SHERPA/RoMEO site (as at 12/05/16).
CollectionsANU Research Publications

Download

File Description SizeFormat Image
01_Orthia_What's_wrong_with_talking_about_the_Scientific_Revolution_2016.pdf355.98 kBAdobe PDFThumbnail


Items in Open Research are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Updated:  17 November 2022/ Responsible Officer:  University Librarian/ Page Contact:  Library Systems & Web Coordinator