The arts and sciences evolve by specialisation and broadening of their scopes. Much innovation results from unusual combinations of views and techniques originating in widely different domains. However, stepping outside an established discipline entails the danger of 'shallowness', even if the primary challenge was a 'deep' integration problem. Acceptance of new departures requires recognition and understanding of what is involved, and this depends, among other things, on the adopted nomenclature of the insiders and the resulting perception by outsiders.Thus, current ways of referring to varieties of research and study - say, 'sciences' vs 'humanities' - often form obstacles to the appreciation of novel approaches. New views are necessary. But which angles must be considered?
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Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
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Maße
Höhe: 213 mm
Breite: 151 mm
Dicke: 15 mm
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ISBN-13
978-90-5356-566-7 (9789053565667)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
P.A.J. Tindemans is the president of Global Knowledge Strategies & Partnerships of the Dutch Society of Sciences and Arts (OCW). A.A.Verrijn-Stuart is an emeritus professor of information science at the University of Leiden. R.P.W. Visser is a professor of natural science at the University of Leiden.
Table of Contents - 8 Preface - 6 1 The Sciences and Arts Debate - 10 2 Historical and Structural Approaches in the Natural and Human Sciences - 20 Discussion: The Role of Laws and Contingency in History - 56 3 Science and Society in Flux - 64 Discussion: Does A New Kind of Science Require a New Kind of Scholar or a New Kind of University? - 92 4 Science for the 21st Century - 100 Discussion: Redrawing Disciplinar Boundaries - but to What Degree? - 150 5 Science and Democracy - 154 Discussion: Science and Democracy: a Difficult Relationship - 222 6 Epilogue - 228 7 Appendix - 232