kuhn in A Sentence

    1

    I think you are misunderstanding Kuhn.

    0
    2

    Kant Manfred Kuhn.

    0
    3

    O'Leary DR Kuhn S Kniss KL et al Birth.

    0
    4

    Others have applied Kuhn's concept of paradigm shift to the social sciences.

    0
    5

    Donna Murphy, Judy Kuhn, and Rob Marshall were also members of the ensemble.

    0
    6

    Kuhn became a prisoner of war of the Soviets after the 20 July plot.

    0
    7

    Kuhn hid these compromising documents under a watch tower of the OKW, located not far from the Wolfsschanze.

    0
    8

    American physicist and historian Thomas Kuhn first described this process as moving between periods of stability and periods of chaos.

    0
    9

    But Kuhn's notion of scientific“progress” occurring through a change in paradigm not only legitimates alternative facts it depends on them.

    0
    10

    When Kuhn was replaced by Peter Ueberroth, Mantle was reinstated and allowed to participate in MLB activities again starting in 1985.

    0
    11

    Strasilla and his Swiss friend Andrea Kuhn used this invention also in combination with surfboards and snowboards, grasskies and selfmade buggies.

    0
    12

    Kuhn's idea was itself revolutionary in its time, as it caused a major change in the way that academics talk about science.

    0
    13

    When enough significant anomalies have accrued against a current paradigm, the scientific discipline is thrown into a state of crisis, according to Kuhn.

    0
    14

    He was rested for the two-match Twenty20 series against Zimbabwe and because Mark Boucher was injured as well Heino Kuhn donned the keeping gloves.

    0
    15

    In The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Kuhn wrote that"the successive transition from one paradigm to another via revolution is the usual developmental pattern of mature science" p.

    0
    16

    The commissioner of baseball, Bowie Kuhn, when he found out Mantle worked at the casino warned him that he would be banned from baseball if he didn't quit.

    0
    17

    A scientific revolution occurs, according to Kuhn, when scientists encounter anomalies that cannot be explained by the universally accepted paradigm within which scientific progress has thereto been made.

    0
    18

    A scientific revolution occurs, according to Kuhn, when scientists encounter anomalies which cannot be explained by the universally accepted paradigm within which scientific progress has thereto been made.

    0
    19

    The paradigm, in Kuhn's view, is not simply the current theory, but the entire worldview in which it exists, and all of the implications which come with it.

    0
    20

    A scientific revolution occurs, according to Kuhn, when scientists encounter anomalies which cannot be explained by the universally accepted paradigm within which scientific progress up to this point has been made.

    0
    21

    Being interrogated after his capture by the Red Army on September 2, 1944, Stauffenberg's friend, Major Joachim Kuhn stated that Stauffenberg had told him in August 1942 that"They are shooting Jews in masses.

    0
    22

    Kuhn vehemently denies this interpretation and states that when a scientific paradigm is replaced by a new one, albeit through a complex social process, the new one is always better, not just different.

    0
    23

    Adolf Hitler forbade three Germans, Richard Kuhn(Chemistry, 1938), Adolf Butenandt(Chemistry, 1939), and Gerhard Domagk(Physiology or Medicine, 1939), from accepting their Nobel Prizes, and the government of the Soviet Union pressured Boris Pasternak(Literature, 1958) to decline his award.

    0
    24

    These claims of relativism are, however, tied to another claim that Kuhn does at least somewhat endorse: that the language and theories of different paradigms cannot be translated into one another or rationally evaluated against one another-that they are incommensurable.

    0
    25

    Kuhn's model of scientific change differs here, and in many places, from that of the logical positivists in that it puts an enhanced emphasis on the individual humans involved as scientists, rather than abstracting science into a purely logical or philosophical venture.

    0
    26

    On this day in history, 1983, Mickey Mantle was threatened by the commissioner of baseball, Bowie Kuhn, that if he didn't stop working for the Claridge Casino in Atlantic City, he would be put on baseball's permanently ineligible list, which meant he would be banned from any Major or Minor League Baseball related activities including coaching, scouting, etc. at any level.

    0