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TomR's avatar

Bill, thanks for this repost. Professor Hanaway's obituary reveals what an extraordinary man, scholar, and teacher he was - even for those of us who never knew of him. I envy you for having had even one class with him.

Your book review was thoughtful. The struggle, or at best the balance, between intuition and logic seems to be the best way forward in any inquiry. It seems like for most history, societies fail when they go fully into or the other end of the spectrum.

Glen Brown's avatar

Loved this Bill. "Medawar sides with the conclusion of Bertrand Russell and Karl Popper that there is no scientific method. The myth of induction ...Medawar clearly rejects the idea that scientific discovery can be premeditated and cites the role of luck in scientific discovery. He carefully qualifies the role of luck by showing how the scientist places himself in a certain mindset amenable to luck through his studies and associations with other scientists." Exactly what Einstein thought. "Imagination is more important than knowledge" said Einstein on the biggest poster in my classroom. Day dreaming, being lost in the gaze, pausing and thinking rather than just consuming facts is vital. Einstein's poster was mocking the fact factory of schooling. I argue that the social sciences are not sciences at all, but always subjective social studies. Even science is subjective- what gets studied-what gets funded and how it is studied are all subjective. How we attend to the world is highly subjective.

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