METODO

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

213215

(1989) Reflexive epistemology, Dordrecht, Springer.

The unity of science as a historico-sociological goal

from the primacy of physics to the epistemological priority of sociology

Danilo Zolo

pp. 83-106

In September 1935 the first International Congress for the Unity of Science took place at the Sorbonne in Paris with a large attendance by European as well as by a number of American scientists. Neurath, the moving force behind the conference, was also its leading light.1 It proved to be a triumph for mid-European logical neopositivism and put Neurath's plan for a new "Encyclopedia" of scientific knowledge on an international footing.2 From this point until his death at Oxford in 1945, the majority of his own writings were devoted to the problem of the encyclopedic integration of science, while his wider social and editorial energies were absorbed by the practical plan for an International Encyclopedia of Unified Science. Despite the obstacles presented in turn by the advent of National Socialism and by the outbreak of war, Neurath's project materialised, in 1935, in the foundation at the Hague of the International Institute for the Unity of Science3 and, from 1938, in the publication of Foundations of the Unity of Science under the auspices of the University of Chicago.4

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-2415-4_5

Full citation:

Zolo, D. (1989). The unity of science as a historico-sociological goal: from the primacy of physics to the epistemological priority of sociology, in Reflexive epistemology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 83-106.

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