Growth of knowledge
In Karl Popper's philosophy, the main problem of methodology and philosophy of science is to explain and promote the growth of knowledge. To this purpose, Popper advocated his theory of falsifiability, testability and testing. He wrote in The Logic of Scientific Discovery: "The central problem of epistemology has always been and still is the problem of the growth of knowledge. And the growth of knowledge can be studied best by studying the growth of scientific knowledge."[1]
See also
- Evolutionary epistemology § Growth of knowledge
- Scientometrics
Abbreviated references
- ^ Popper 1959, p. xix.
References
- Popper, Karl (1959). The Logic of Scientific Discovery (2002 pbk; 2005 ebook ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27844-7. Alt URL
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Karl Popper
- Bold hypothesis
- Critical rationalism
- Falsifiability
- Growth of knowledge
- Open society
- Popper's experiment
- Popper's three worlds
- Verisimilitude
- The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934)
- The Poverty of Historicism (1936)
- The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945)
- Conjectures and Refutations (1963)
- Unended Quest (1976)
- The Myth of the Framework (1994)
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