What truth is not, according to Kuhn, is an accurate representation of the world as it is in itself. Scientific theories represent a world, but one partially constituted by the cognitive activities of the scientists themselves. This is not a commonsensical view, but it has a distinguished philosophical pedigree, associated most strongly with Kant. The Kantian view is that the truths we can know are truths about a 'phenomenal' world that is the joint product of the 'things in themselves' and the organising, conceptual activity of the human mind.


Peter Lipton, "Kant on Wheels", London Review of Books (19 July 2001)


What truth is not, according to Kuhn, is an accurate representation of the world as it is in itself. Scientific theories represent a world, but one...

What truth is not, according to Kuhn, is an accurate representation of the world as it is in itself. Scientific theories represent a world, but one...

What truth is not, according to Kuhn, is an accurate representation of the world as it is in itself. Scientific theories represent a world, but one...

What truth is not, according to Kuhn, is an accurate representation of the world as it is in itself. Scientific theories represent a world, but one...