
The Knowledge Machine
How Irrationality Created Modern Science
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Narrado por:
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Julian Elfer
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De:
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Michael Strevens
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A paradigm-shifting work that revolutionizes our understanding of the origins and structure of science.
Captivatingly written, interwoven with historical vignettes ranging from Newton's alchemy to quantum mechanics to the storm surge of Hurricane Sandy, Michael Strevens' wholly original investigation of science asks two fundamental questions: Why is science so powerful? And why did it take so long, 2,000 years after the invention of philosophy and mathematics, for the human race to start using science to learn the secrets of nature? The Knowledge Machine's radical answer is that science calls on its practitioners to do something irrational: By willfully ignoring religion, theoretical beauty, and, especially, philosophy - essentially stripping away all previous knowledge - scientists embrace an unnaturally narrow method of inquiry, channeling unprecedented energy into observation and experimentation.
Like Yuval Harari's Sapiens or Thomas Kuhn's 1962 classic, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, The Knowledge Machine overturns much of what we thought we knew about the origins of the modern world.
©2020 Michael Strevens (P)2020 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksLos oyentes también disfrutaron...
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Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre The Knowledge Machine
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- appmur3030
- 02-08-23
Eye opening and informative
After finishing “The Enlightenment,” this was a good companion that focused on science in a fresh way.
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- ScottF
- 01-02-23
Awe
This is an important read . We live in elegance and order. The author shares his understanding and it is wonder..
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- Anonymous User
- 08-21-24
An exceptionally good book
A great analysis of the foundations of modern science. A very well written book that draws on the author's vast knowledge of the history of science and presents some fantastic insights on what has made the scientific method so successful.
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- Sean Clement
- 04-13-21
The best book I have consumed in a very long time.
Hard to overstate the breadth of so short a work, The Knowledge Machine attempts to explain the rationality, irrationality, objective and subjective pieces that come together to form science and it's demarcation from natural philosophy. A must read for any science or science adjacent person.
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- Anthony I. Jack
- 08-01-22
Fascinating story of how science came to be
Strevens gives a strong and historically well illustrated account of the development of modern science. His claim is that science took so long to fully develop because it requires a type of irrationality - an unreasonable narrowing of thought. As far as it goes, the book is strong and enjoyable to read. My main complaint is that Strevens does little to clarify other types of reasoning and where they might play an important role that science alone cannot fulfill.
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- Ivan
- 06-26-21
Beautifully written, fascinating thesis
Strevens must have studied the flowers of rhetoric, because this book is so beautifully written. The thesis is that science is successful and has so much continuity because it demands an "irrational" separation between cold, empirical reporting and the aesthetic judgements of individual scientists (who are nonetheless permitted to express their views informally). Strevens argues that this kind of separation is unnatural and counterintuitive, and that it was only in the peculiar, Newtonian, post 30 Years War milieu of 17th century Europe that such a separation could arise.
Overall, I find the argument compelling, but I'm not expert enough to pronounce judgment on its correctness. I was hoping to hear the author connect his theory with Bayesian models of inquiry, but I think I know how he might do that.
If you think science is a simple matter of falsification, this book will help set you straight. Either way, this was a really fun listen.
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- John
- 05-02-21
Almost there. Scholarly review.
I wanted the book to succeed, but it fails. Science is distinct from mere engineering precisely because more than prediction and control matter; theory does too. The Iron Rule (i) marginalizes or altogether ignores the role of the creation of new forms of mathematics (e.g. statistics, calculus, information theory, causality, topology etc.),(ii) the development of regimented reference to real objects which expand language & linguistic inferential capacities, and (iii) the generation of "styles of reasoning" (cf. Hacking) which expand what can be talked about and connect experimental phenomenon to theory. All three components are part of scientific communication, not just informal conversation and thing, and any can decisively decide debates. These new kinds of logics, empirically motivated or forced (e.g. Fourier analysis) allow for kinds of debate distinct from before the Scientific Revolution(SR), but which don't suffer the pathologies of "natural philosophy": endless cycles of debate and the generation of distinct schools of thought.
Mathematics can alone constrains the antics of the world and saves us from countless unnecessary experiments, trials and controls. Science is not a pile of data or an Iron Rule "to look", but also a developing theoretical framework increasingly free of Bacon's language idol and replaces old words with an ever-growing empirically rich language that unifies and can falsify in practice as well as experiment.. The generation and effort into regimenting a language with references to actual, causally relevant objects, and the languages role in gluing together phenomenon and providing inferences similar to mathematical ones, capable of deciding debate is ignored.
This shortcoming produces another; how is it that a scientific operationalization (reduction of a hypothesis to an experiment) counts as good or relevant? Pragmatists have an answer: it comes down to generating a desired power over nature, but pandemonium is in the details, and Strevens ignores this mystery. (He almost gets it with his rhyming thought experiment). As a former practicing scientist the creative act of testing a hypothesis often included a concomitant persuasive act of convincing others the experiment is relevant, and this requires a "Style of Reasoning", which is not quite a paradigm, but which requires education and practice to develop. The Iron Rule presumes operationalization is easy, when it is not.
Summary: I wish the inter-workings of the knowledge machine were fully exposed, but much remains a black box.
(1) How does a new mathematics form and become authoritative?
(2) How do new ways of talking generate right material inferences?
(3) What sorts of "Bridge Law" consensuses connect a proposed operationalization from experiment to verbal/mathematical theory?
These are severe shortcomings. The knowledge machine is held together by theory, not merely facts or tricks or hacks (like machine translation or GPT-3, so much AI work, engineering formulae or Sui Dynasty Chinese canal building). Scientific data connect like lego blocks into a structure of stable theories, with a shape that allows for mathematical and linguistic inference and the appropriate placement of new blocks of observations.
Sociologically, the works failure to regard the role of replicability and technology in science. Accumulation of data doesn't just happen, because people re-test general relativity, for example, but because subsequent experiments require scientists to reproduce previous experiments to move forward. In the biological sciences, re-using a strain or protein for further inquiry critically augments knowledge. And, in areas where science translates to commercial applications, successful commercial technologies can settle debates (Heavier than air controlled flight happens, contrary to theorists who denied the possibility.).
As for the historical scholarship, there is nothing novel. But, too little credit is given to Boyle who set forth the rules of communication, and too much to Newton whose remarks were ignored on the Continent, while Boyle was not. Newton broke his metaphysical "shallowness" when it came to light and "absolute space".
A worthy attempt, part of the story for sure, but lots missing. We still don't know how the knowledge machine works.
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- Pedro
- 04-05-23
cutting the Gordian knot
what makes the scientific method so effective is the ruthlessness with which it pursues the truth. this was a great reader and a helpful way to look at the debate. a must read for all science fans and philosophical types.
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- Admin
- 04-13-23
Excellent
Strevens’s book is clear and in touch with the literature and history of science and scientific development. This should be required reading for philosophers of science and scientists alike.
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- Amazon Customer
- 09-18-23
Somewhat entertaining if you find irony funny.
First, the narration was great! Good job there! Unfortunately that is the nicest thing I can say about this book. The author comes across as an idiot who's ignorance on the supposed subject of this book is blatantly clear. This reads like a regurgitation of dogma dictated by a particularly liberal college professor by a poor college student just trying to pass their class with a "C". Though I'd grade this drivel a "D" for the complete lack of understanding and verifiably false claims used to support arguments. I was really hoping for something engaging on a interesting topic but I regret wasting my time on this book. SKIP
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