A New Organon

Science Studies in Interwar Poland, Historische Wissensforschung

Friedrich Cain/Bernhard Kleeberg

69,00 €
Inkl. 7% Steuern

Lieferzeit: 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)

When Poland gained independence in 1918, it became an urgent priority to secure information on just how the state and society ought to be organized. Up until 1939, the journal Nauka Polska and the working group Kolo Naukoznawcze provided sociologists, philosophers, pedagogues, and scientists with a forum to debate the advancement of science and the academic system. Among other things, they asked how scientific creativity could be generated and stabilized (Antoni B. Dobrowolski), what a socio-psychological "science of knowledge" should look like (Florian Znaniecki), and how society could profit from a "science of science" (Maria Ossowska and Stanislaw Ossowski). Unlike similar contemporary contributions, such as Ludwik Fleck's, most of these ideas are unknown today. The volume reconstructs the forgotten history of this Warsaw-based sociology of knowledge and science, presenting for the first time pivotal articles in English translation. Contributors:Marta Bucholc, Friedrich Cain, Pawel Kawalec, Bernhard Kleeberg, Andreas Langenohl, Olga Linkiewicz, Katrin Steffen, Jan Surman, Jan Piskurewicz, Leszek Zasztowt

Geboren 1985; Studium der Kulturwissenschaften und Geschichte; Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter an der Universität Konstanz und am Max-Weber-Kolleg der Universität Erfurt, seit 2021 an der Universität Wien; 2018 Promotion an der Universität Konstanz. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3078-9933

Mehr Informationen
Autor Friedrich Cain/Bernhard Kleeberg
Verlag Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. KG
ISBN 9783161543159
ISBN/EAN 9783161543159
Lieferzeit 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)
Erscheinungsdatum 28.09.2016
Einband Gebunden
Format 2.6 x 24 x 16.3
Seitenzahl VI, 395 S.
Gewicht 730

Weitere Informationen

Mehr Informationen
Verlag Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. KG
ISBN 9783161543159
Erscheinungsdatum 28.09.2016
Einband Gebunden
Format 2.6 x 24 x 16.3
Gewicht 730

When Poland gained independence in 1918, it became an urgent priority to secure information on just how the state and society ought to be organized. Up until 1939, the journal Nauka Polska and the working group Kolo Naukoznawcze provided sociologists, philosophers, pedagogues, and scientists with a forum to debate the advancement of science and the academic system. Among other things, they asked how scientific creativity could be generated and stabilized (Antoni B. Dobrowolski), what a socio-psychological "science of knowledge" should look like (Florian Znaniecki), and how society could profit from a "science of science" (Maria Ossowska and Stanislaw Ossowski). Unlike similar contemporary contributions, such as Ludwik Fleck's, most of these ideas are unknown today. The volume reconstructs the forgotten history of this Warsaw-based sociology of knowledge and science, presenting for the first time pivotal articles in English translation. Contributors:Marta Bucholc, Friedrich Cain, Pawel Kawalec, Bernhard Kleeberg, Andreas Langenohl, Olga Linkiewicz, Katrin Steffen, Jan Surman, Jan Piskurewicz, Leszek Zasztowt

Geboren 1985; Studium der Kulturwissenschaften und Geschichte; Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter an der Universität Konstanz und am Max-Weber-Kolleg der Universität Erfurt, seit 2021 an der Universität Wien; 2018 Promotion an der Universität Konstanz. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3078-9933

 

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