Home Philosophy Worin könnten die Einheit und die Vielfalt der Wissenschaften bestehen?
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Worin könnten die Einheit und die Vielfalt der Wissenschaften bestehen?

  • Paul Hoyningen-Huene
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

What could the unity and diversity of the sciences consist in? In the heyday of logical empiricism, the answer to the title question was easy. The sciences stand in hierarchical order, and the diversity of the sciences is domesticated by reduction relations among them, leading to their unity. However, in the 1960s Feyerabend and Kuhn claimed that these reduction relations cannot be that simple because usually, the concepts of the involved sciences do not fit neatly together. Instead, there are conceptual incongruities between them, which where baptized “incommensurability”. This holds both diachronically, that is for precursor and successor theories, and synchronically, that is for sciences whose subject matter is some whole and sciences whose subject matter is their parts, respectively. If one does not accept the resulting, seemingly unbridgeable diversity of the sciences, one needs a different viewpoint. This viewpoint may be delivered by “Systematicity Theory” that is a new general philosophy of science. Systematicity theory claims that all sciences exhibit, in several dimensions, a higher degree of systematicity, when compared with everyday knowledge. However, as the concept of systematicity varies with the different disciplines and sub-disciplines, the unity among the sciences generated by systematicity is of the Wittgensteinian family resemblance kind which, at the same time, respects their diversity.

Abstract

What could the unity and diversity of the sciences consist in? In the heyday of logical empiricism, the answer to the title question was easy. The sciences stand in hierarchical order, and the diversity of the sciences is domesticated by reduction relations among them, leading to their unity. However, in the 1960s Feyerabend and Kuhn claimed that these reduction relations cannot be that simple because usually, the concepts of the involved sciences do not fit neatly together. Instead, there are conceptual incongruities between them, which where baptized “incommensurability”. This holds both diachronically, that is for precursor and successor theories, and synchronically, that is for sciences whose subject matter is some whole and sciences whose subject matter is their parts, respectively. If one does not accept the resulting, seemingly unbridgeable diversity of the sciences, one needs a different viewpoint. This viewpoint may be delivered by “Systematicity Theory” that is a new general philosophy of science. Systematicity theory claims that all sciences exhibit, in several dimensions, a higher degree of systematicity, when compared with everyday knowledge. However, as the concept of systematicity varies with the different disciplines and sub-disciplines, the unity among the sciences generated by systematicity is of the Wittgensteinian family resemblance kind which, at the same time, respects their diversity.

Downloaded on 25.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110614831-002/html
Scroll to top button