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Authors
A Connes
A. S. Eddington
+24 more
AF Raan Van
B Efron
CF Weizsäcker Von
CG Hempel
CV Weizsäcker Von
D Botting
ES Kryachko
G Fraser
G Helferich
GE Derrick
GT Hooft
H Lyre
JE Hirsch
K Popper
L Brillouin
M Kafatos
M Kline
P Sigmund
PA Dirac
PO Larsen
T Görnitz
TS Kuhn
V Kuzmin
VF Asmus
Publication date
1 January 2018
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
peer reviewedThe purpose of Science is to achieve the truth on the way to a new knowledge. The truth, as Immanuel Kant wrote, is the correspondence of knowledge with its object. However, the key question is how to “find a universal and true criterion of the truth of all knowledge”? The contribution of the fundamental sciences is extremely important. And here, in my opinion, there appears a modern paradox which has globally changed the public consciousness. On the one hand, the fundamental science went into the status of the labor forces and, on the other hand, modern production, demanding “the implementation of scientific research and scientific approach, began increasingly resemble to science.” In the process of production—which creates the product of labor including both material goods and services in the case of material production and a new knowledge as in the case of science—the labor forces enter into industrial relations. If any scientific work as an object, an element of the external world that we aim to contemplate the work, as well as a phenomenon, and develop its conceptual representation as well as about the phenomenon that it is modeling. Hence, the closer to the actual simulated phenomenon to the studied one, the closer this work to the truth. I assume my viewpoint is quite clear, even without mentioning Goethe: “It is a shame that the truth is so simple.”. © 2018, Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature
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oai:orbi.ulg.ac.be:2268/266237
Last time updated on 23/12/2021
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Last time updated on 10/08/2021