"In the history of sciences, important advances often come from... the recognition that two hitherto separate observations can be viewed from a new angle and seen to represent nothing but different facets of one phenomenon. Thus, terrestrial and celestial mechanisms became a single science with Newton's laws. Thermodynamics and mechanics were unified through statistical mechanics, as were optics and electromagnetism through Maxwell's theory of magnetic field, or chemistry and through quantum mechanics. Similarly different combinations of the same atoms, obeying the same laws, were shown by biochemists to compose both the inanimate and animate worlds. ... Despite such generalizations, however, large gaps remain... Following the line from physics to sociology, one goes from simpler to the more complex objects... from the poorer to the richer empirical content, as well as from the harder to the softer system of hypotheses and experimentation. ...Because of the hierarchy of objects, the problem is always to explain the more complex in terms and concepts applying to the simpler. This is the old problem of reduction, emergence, whole and parts... an understanding of the simple is necessary to understand the more complex, but whether it is sufficient is questionable. ...the appearance of life and later of thought and language—led to phenomena that previously did not exist... To describe and to interpret these phenomena new concepts, meaningless at the previous level, are required. ...At the limit total reductionism results in absurdity. ...explaining democracy in terms of the structure and properties of elementary particles... is clearly nonsense."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
, "Evolution and Tinkering," Science (June 10, 1977) Vol. 196, No. 4295
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_science
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
History of science
156 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by History of science →
Related Quotes
"Five geometers—Clairaut, Euler, D'Alembert, Lagrange and Laplace—shared among them the world of which Newton had reve…"
"Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability. Their chief use for delight, is in privateness and retiring…"
"Understanding what M-theory really is—the physics it embodies—would transform our understanding of nature at least as…"
"The more man inquires into the laws which regulate the material universe, the more he is convinced that all its varie…"
"Let such a history be once provided and well set forth, and let there be added to it such auxiliary and light-giving …"
"This history I call Primary History, or the Mother History."
"Atomism began life as a philosophical idea that would fail virtually every contemporary test of what should be regard…"
"Scanning the past millennia of human achievement reveals just how much has been achieved during the last three hundre…"
"Maxwell in particular noted that the phenomena of electromagnetism did not fit into the scheme of Newtonian mechanics…"
"Reason may be employed in two ways to establish a point: firstly, for the purpose of furnishing sufficient proof of s…"