Discussion Questions for
Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
Discussion Questions - Kuhn, chapters 1-2:
1. According to Kuhn, what is the major shortcoming of the “usual image
of science”
that emphasizes procedures of confirmation and falsification?
2. What is the view of scientific development Kuhn refers to as “development-by-
accumulation” and “process of accretion”? What reasons
does he give for doubting
this view?
3. Why does Kuhn believe that rigorous application scientific methods is
not sufficient to
provide definite answers to scientific questions? What
sorts of additional factors
influence how scientists answer those questions, according
to Kuhn?
4. According to Kuhn, what sorts of changes accompany scientific revolutions
such as
those associated with Copernicus, Newton, Lavoisier,
and Einstein?
5. What is the distinction, to which Kuhn refers, between “the context
of discovery” and
“the context of justification”? Why does Kuhn believe
that the distinction does not
discredit his historical approach to issues in the philosophy
of science?
6. What does Kuhn mean by the term “normal science”? What does he mean
by
“paradigm”? How are the two concepts related to each other?
7. According to Kuhn, what are the main characteristics of work in an area
of science
(e.g., optics, electricity) during the period before a paradigm
takes hold and normal
science emerges? What are the main differences between the
activities of scientists
during the pre-normal-science phase and their activities during
the normal-science
phase?
8. According to Kuhn, what role do paradigms play in fact-gathering activities
by
scientists? What are the advantages of having a paradigm
in deciding which facts to
look for? What are the disadvantages of not having a
paradigm?
9. According to Kuhn, does a paradigm have to explain all the facts that
it confronts?
Why or why not?
10. According to Kuhn, what happens to the losing sides (i.e., competing
paradigms and
the scientists who support them) when one
paradigm emerges as dominant in an area
of scientific inquiry?
11. According to Kuhn, what are the typical effects of the emergence of
a dominant
scientific paradigm on (a) the kinds of
research problems addressed by scientists in the
field and (b) the kinds of communications
(e.g., writings) produced by those scientists
and the audiences for which they are intended?
Discussion Questions - Kuhn, chapters 3-4:
-
What does Kuhn mean by the sentence, "Mopping-up operations are what
engage most scientists throughout their careers"? What sorts of "mopping-up
operations" is he referring to?
-
Kuhn says that normal science "seems an attempt to force nature into
the preformed and relatively inflexible box that the paradigm supplies."
What does he mean by this?
-
Kuhn says that a paradigm in science serves as a "model" or "pattern"
in one sense of the terms but not in another sense. What are the two senses
that he has in mind, and which of them does he associate with scientific
paradigms?
-
According to Kuhn, what are the "three normal foci for factual scientific
investigation" for normal science?
-
What does Kuhn mean by the phrase "articulate a paradigm"? What are
the three kinds of experiments that scientists conduct in order to articulate
a paradigm? What kinds of information do those experiments provide?
-
According to Kuhn, what are the three types of theoretical problems
of normal science?
-
According to Kuhn, in what ways are the research problems of normal
science similar to puzzle-solving? How are those problems different from
other sorts of problems that scientists could address? What role do the
paradigms associated with normal science play in the selection of research
problems? What explains the "enthusiasm and devotion" of scientists in
pursuing the solutions of those problems?
-
How, according to Kuhn, does the paradigm associated with a normal science
assure the research scientist that the problem he/she is attempting to
solve actually has a solution?
-
According to Kuhn, what sorts of restrictions does normal science place
on solutions to research problems?
-
What are the main categories of rules that restrict solutions to research
problems of a normal science, according to Kuhn? What is the relationship
between those rules and the governing paradigms?
Discussion Questions - Kuhn, chapters 5-6
-
Why, according to Kuhn, can scientific paradigms not be understood entirely
in terms of shared rules, such as those he discusses in chapter 4?
-
What reasons does Kuhn provide for believing that a paradigm "could
determine normal science without the intervention of discoverable rules"?
-
Why does Kuhn believe that "research under a paradigm must be a particularly
effective way of inducing paradigm change"?
-
What does Kuhn mean by "anomaly"? Why does he say that, until something
anomalous has been assimilated by an adjustment of a theory, it "is not
quite a scientific fact at all"?
-
Why, according to Kuhn, is it often difficult to find a precise date
for scientific discoveries? What does this imply about the nature of discovery
in science?
-
What, according to Kuhn, are the characteristics of scientific discoveries
that involve paradigm changes? What are the three examples of scientific
discoveries that Kuhn uses to illustrate these characteristics? What contrast
does Kuhn draw between the paradigm change that occurred with the discovery
of oxygen and the paradigm change that occurred with the discovery of X-rays?
-
Kuhn says that there is evidence that the characteristics of scientific
discoveries that involve paradigm changes "are built into the nature of
the perceptual process itself." What does he mean by this, and what evidence
does he refer to? Do you find his argument plausible? Why or why not?
-
How, according to Kuhn, does normal science, which tends to suppress
novelty, lead to the emergence of anomalies and eventually to changes of
paradigm?
Discussion Questions - Kuhn, chapters 7-8
-
What does Kuhn mean by "crisis" in relation to scientific paradigms?
Are all paradigm changes a result of crises, according to Kuhn? Explain.
-
What are the three examples that Kuhn uses to illustrate crises in scientific
paradigms? For each case, explain the nature of the crisis that occurred.
What sorts of anomalies were involved in each? What theories were replaced
as a result of those crises? What theories replaced them?
-
According to Kuhn, precursors of important scientific theories are sometimes
proposed long before those theories are accepted by scientific communities.
How does Kuhn explain why those precursor theories are ignored at the time
that they are proposed even though they are later accepted as correct?
-
What reasons does Kuhn give for doubting that scientists reject paradigms
because they are confronted with anomalies or counterinstances? (By the
way, what, according to Kuhn, is the main difference between an anomaly
and a counterinstance?)
-
What does Kuhn mean by the following statements? "Once a first paradigm
through which to view nature has been found, there is no such thing as
research in the absence of any paradigm. To reject one paradigm without
simultaneously substituting another is to reject science itself." Do you
agree? Why or why not?
-
According to Kuhn, how do crises in science permit new paradigms to
emerge? Why do those new paradigms emerge gradually and not instantaneously?
(p. 80)
-
What, according to Kuhn, accounts for the popularity of the (mistaken)
view that truth and falsity in science are determined by confronting scientific
statements with facts through the processes of confirmation and falsification?
Do you agree with Kuhn? Why or why not? (p. 80)
-
According to Kuhn, what are some of the reasons why some anomalies lead
to scientific crises (and others do not)? (p. 82)
-
Why, according to Kuhn, do scientific crises involve the loosening or
blurring of the rules of normal science? How does this make it easier for
rival paradigms to emerge? (pp. 82-83)
-
According to Kuhn, what are the three ways in which a scientific crisis
can "close"? How many of them involve a change of paradigm? (p. 84)
-
Why are "thought experiments" likely to occur during scientific crises?
What function do they perform in testing existing paradigms? (p. 88)
-
Why, according to Kuhn, are individuals who invent new scientific paradigms
often very young or very new to the field whose paradigm they change? Does
Kuhn's view seem plausble? Why or why not? (p. 90)
-
What are the "symptoms" of a transition from normal to extraordinary
research in science, according to Kuhn? (p. 91)