Tag: Polanyi

The Routledge Handbook on Karl Polanyi


Free Download Michele Cangiani, "The Routledge Handbook on Karl Polanyi "
English | ISBN: 1032373830 | 2024 | 398 pages | PDF | 5 MB
Karl Polanyi is one of the most influential social scientists of our era. A report of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) begins by noting that we are in a "Polanyi era": a time of dangerously unregulated markets, where the greatest need for decisive political action is matched by the least trust in politics.

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Michael Polanyi The Art of Knowing


Free Download Michael Polanyi: The Art of Knowing (Library Modern Thinkers) by Mark T. Mitchell
English | September 15, 2006 | ISBN: 1932236902, 1932236910 | True EPUB | 220 pages | 4.2 MB
The polymath Michael Polanyi first made his mark as a physical chemist, but his interests gradually shifted to economics, politics, and philosophy, in which field he would ultimately propose a revolutionary theory of knowledge that grew out of his firsthand experience with both the scientific method and political totalitarianism.

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Michael Polanyi and His Generation Origins of the Social Construction of Science


Free Download Mary Jo Nye, "Michael Polanyi and His Generation: Origins of the Social Construction of Science"
English | 2013 | ISBN: 022610317X, 0226610632 | PDF | pages: 429 | 1.6 mb
In Michael Polanyi and His Generation, Mary Jo Nye investigates the role that Michael Polanyi and several of his contemporaries played in the emergence of the social turn in the philosophy of science. This turn involved seeing science as a socially based enterprise that does not rely on empiricism and reason alone but on social communities, behavioral norms, and personal commitments. Nye argues that the roots of the social turn are to be found in the scientific culture and political events of Europe in the 1930s, when scientific intellectuals struggled to defend the universal status of scientific knowledge and to justify public support for science in an era of economic catastrophe, Stalinism and Fascism, and increased demands for applications of science to industry and social welfare.At the center of this struggle was Polanyi, who Nye contends was one of the first advocates of this new conception of science. Nye reconstructs Polanyi’s scientific and political milieus in Budapest, Berlin, and Manchester from the 1910s to the 1950s and explains how he and other natural scientists and social scientists of his generation-including J. D. Bernal, Ludwik Fleck, Karl Mannheim, and Robert K. Merton-and the next, such as Thomas Kuhn, forged a politically charged philosophy of science, one that newly emphasized the social construction of science.

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