The core concept from Kuhn: the frameworks of assumptions, methods, and standards within which normal science operates. Scientific Paradigms define what questions are worth asking, what methods are appropriate, what counts as evidence, what constitutes a solution. They're the invisible structures that make normal science possible—and that make revolutionary science so traumatic. Understanding Scientific Paradigms is essential for understanding how science actually works, not how it's idealized.
Example: "He'd thought science just accumulated facts. Scientific Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of revolutions."
by Abzugal March 9, 2026
Get the Scientific Paradigms mug.The framework, famously articulated by Thomas Kuhn, that science doesn't progress smoothly but through violent revolutions. A scientific paradigm is the constellation of beliefs, values, and techniques shared by a community—it's the rulebook everyone agrees to play by during "normal science." This theory states that when too many anomalies break the rules, a crisis leads to a paradigm shift, where the old rulebook is burned and a new one is written. What was heresy becomes textbook truth.
Theory of Scientific Paradigms Example: For centuries, astronomy played by the Ptolemaic paradigm rulebook (Earth at the center). Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo were rule-breakers who kept pointing out anomalies. The crisis led to the Copernican paradigm shift—a scientific revolution where the Sun took center stage. Suddenly, the old "obvious truth" became a historical curiosity, and the heretics became the founding fathers of a new game.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 6, 2026
Get the Theory of Scientific Paradigms mug.The study of how entire frameworks of scientific thought emerge, stabilize, and eventually collapse—and how the psychology of scientists shapes these processes. Paradigms aren't just sets of theories; they're ways of seeing, communities of belief, and sources of identity. The psychology of paradigms examines why scientists resist revolutionary ideas (cognitive conservatism, career investment, social pressure), how paradigms shift despite resistance (anomalies accumulate, young scientists defect, the old guard retires), and what it feels like to live through a scientific revolution (exhilarating for the victors, devastating for the vanquished). Understanding this psychology reveals that science progresses not despite human nature but through it—through passion, stubbornness, competition, and the eventual triumph of evidence over ego.
Example: "He lived through a paradigm shift in his field and watched the psychology play out in real time—older scientists defending ideas they'd built careers on, younger ones eager to tear them down, the gradual tipping point where the new view became unstoppable. The psychology of scientific paradigms explained why it took so long: not because the evidence was weak, but because people are people."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Scientific Paradigms mug.The theory, associated with Thomas Kuhn, that science progresses not through steady accumulation of knowledge but through paradigm shifts—fundamental changes in the frameworks within which science operates. A paradigm is a whole worldview: assumptions, methods, standards, exemplars. Normal science works within a paradigm; revolutionary science breaks it. The Theory of Scientific Paradigms explains why science is not simply cumulative, why old theories are not simply absorbed into new ones, why scientific change is often resisted and traumatic. It's the theory that science is human, historical, and revolutionary—not a smooth march to truth but a series of ruptures.
Example: "He'd thought science just added knowledge over time, like building a wall brick by brick. The Theory of Scientific Paradigms showed him otherwise: science was more like a series of earthquakes—old structures collapsed, new ones rose, and the landscape was permanently changed. The bricks didn't just accumulate; they were reshuffled, remade, sometimes discarded."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Theory of Scientific Paradigms mug.The principle that science operates within paradigms—that scientific knowledge is always knowledge-within-a-framework, that paradigms shape what questions are asked, what methods are used, what counts as evidence. The Law of Scientific Paradigms, derived from Kuhn's work, argues that science is not a simple accumulation of facts but a series of paradigm-governed activities. Normal science works within a paradigm; revolutionary science breaks it. Paradigms are incommensurable—they can't be directly compared because they define the world differently. The law doesn't say science is irrational; it says science is historical, and that understanding science means understanding its paradigms.
Example: "He'd thought science just discovered facts, one after another. The Law of Scientific Paradigms showed him otherwise: facts were always facts-within-a-paradigm. When paradigms shifted, facts shifted too. What was true in Newton's paradigm wasn't false in Einstein's—it was differently true. Science wasn't a straight line; it was a series of leaps."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Law of Scientific Paradigms mug.The application of Critical Theory to Kuhn's concept of scientific paradigms—examining how paradigms are shaped by power, how they exclude alternative views, and how paradigm shifts are political as well as scientific. Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms asks: Who benefits from dominant paradigms? Whose work is marginalized? How do power relations influence which paradigms succeed? It draws on Kuhn but adds critical analysis of the social forces that shape scientific revolutions. Paradigms aren't just cognitive; they're social, institutional, political.
"Paradigm shifts happen, Kuhn said. Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms asks: why these shifts? Who benefits? The shift from geocentrism to heliocentrism wasn't just science; it was politics—church power, state power, institutional power. Paradigms aren't just ideas; they're systems of authority. Critical theory insists on asking who holds power in the paradigm, and who's excluded."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
Get the Critical Theory of Scientific Paradigms mug.The study of the often messy, protracted, and illogical battles that occur when two competing scientific paradigms vie for dominance within a field. According to Kuhn, these disputes cannot be settled by mere evidence alone, because the paradigms define what counts as evidence and what constitutes a good argument. The fight is as much about persuasion, authority, generational change, and control of institutions as it is about data.
Theory of the Dispute of Scientific Paradigms Example: The decades-long war between Plate Tectonics and the older Geosynclinal Theory in geology was a brutal Dispute of Scientific Paradigms. Established geologists invested in the old model mocked continental drift as fantasy, while young Turks amassed magnetic striping data. The shift only happened when the old guard retired and textbooks were rewritten.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
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