Kuhn's recognition that science might cease—leaving us with what Charles Sanders Peirce had defined as the "truth" about nature—made it even more imperative for Kuhn than for Popper to challenge science's authority, to deny that science can ever arrive at absolute truth. "The one thing I think you shouldn't say is that now we've found out what the world is really like," Kuhn said. "Because that's not what I think the game is about."


Ch. 2 : The End of Philosophy - The End of Science (1996)


Kuhn's recognition that science might cease—leaving us with what Charles Sanders Peirce had defined as the truth about nature—made it even more...

Kuhn's recognition that science might cease—leaving us with what Charles Sanders Peirce had defined as the truth about nature—made it even more...

Kuhn's recognition that science might cease—leaving us with what Charles Sanders Peirce had defined as the truth about nature—made it even more...

Kuhn's recognition that science might cease—leaving us with what Charles Sanders Peirce had defined as the truth about nature—made it even more...