PDA

View Full Version : Source for quotation about science/physics?


Stephan Hoyer
Mar15-06, 02:18 AM
I read this some time ago, I don't remember where. Roughly paraphased:

"Old scientists are never convinced of any radical new theory. Eventually, the old scientists die and are replaced by new ones who grew up being taught it."

Does this sound familiar to anyone? Thanks for your help.

matthyaouw
Mar15-06, 10:57 AM
That sounds like Thomas Kuhn's 'stability & revolution' theory of how science works.

franznietzsche
Mar15-06, 11:27 AM
Yeah, I think it might have been Kuhn.

Moonbear
Mar15-06, 11:55 AM
It was Max Planck, written in The Philosophy of Physics.

Just dug out my copy of Bartlett's, so here's the full quote as they have it:
An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul. What does happen is that its opponents gradually die out and that the growing generation is familiarized with the idea from the beginning.

Note that in the actual quote, the word "rarely" is used, not "never."

Stephan Hoyer
Mar15-06, 06:00 PM
Thanks, Moonbear.

Ivan Seeking
Mar15-06, 06:11 PM
Another version that used to be part of my signature: Science progresses one death at a time.

Bladibla
Mar15-06, 06:19 PM
A great website for whatever quotes you need is this (http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Mathematicians/Faraday.html) website. If you go down for each scientist's biography, there is a 'quotes' link. For example, for Micheal Faraday, this (http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Quotations/Faraday.html) would be the link you would get; a list of quotes for the scientist.

Work, finish, publish

- Faraday

My Favourite quote.