Thanks for sharing that, Dave. I tried the on-line OED, but don't have access to the database. Could you go a bit further with how it emerged - does OED cite a first usage or early usages of the term 'scientism'? Does it acknowledge a scientist, philosopher or other thinker who identified/defined it?
Don, what more can you say about the misapplication of science? Is this an ideological dimension or some kind of over-reaching of science's domain? Perhaps 'applied science' is rather different from 'natural science' in a similar way to how 'social science' differs from a 'pure' study of nature. Probably we would agree that 'scientism' is more than simply applied scientific methodology?
Curious also to hear how scientism and dogmatism are contrasted.
Gregory
p.s. as for "Ideas of the Great Philosophers" and Bertrand Russell (1872-1970), perhaps he identified or supported 'scientism' using a philosophy of science approach?
"D. F. Siemens, Jr." <dfsiemensjr@juno.com> wrote:
OED takes the term back to 1877, with a contrast between dogmatism and scientism.
Dave
Don Nield <d.nield@auckland.ac.nz> wrote: A google search with "scientism dictionary" produces quite a bit of
information.
It appears that the word has been in use since the 19th century. It
started out as simply referring to scientific methodology. At some
stage it acquired the secondary meaning of misapplication ot the
scientific method to fields outside science.
Don
---------------------------------
Share your photos with the people who matter at Yahoo! Canada Photos
To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Sat Aug 5 10:55:28 2006
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Sat Aug 05 2006 - 10:55:28 EDT