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  1. Science consists in progress by innovation. Scientists, however, are committed to all kinds of traditions that persist or recur in society regardless of intellectual and institutional changes.

    • Joseph Mali
    • 1989
  2. 4 de nov. de 2020 · I demonstrate how cultural evolution can serve as an unifying framework for the SSC and how, conversely, science communication can serve as a fertile testing ground for applying, exploring, and...

    • Theiss Bendixen
    • tb@cas.au.dk
    • 2020
  3. 4 de mar. de 2004 · Its three central assertions are that (1) science is our only source of genuine knowledge about the world, (2) science is the only way to understand humanity’s place in the world, and (3) science provides the only credible view of the world as a whole.

  4. 1 de jan. de 2023 · This paper provides the perspectives of the web links from an Indigenous world and the modern science view. Integrating the Indigenous knowledge into modern science and addressing the gaps in the traditional knowledge for science-policy assessments should be set as a high priority.

  5. 1 de set. de 2015 · Scientists can introduce novel chemicals and chemical relationships (innovation) or delve deeper into known ones (tradition). They can consolidate knowledge clusters or bridge them. The aggregate distribution of published strategies remains remarkably stable.

    • Jacob G. Foster, Andrey Rzhetsky, James A. Evans
    • 2015
  6. 1 de set. de 2015 · We argue that tradition and innovation label distinct regions in the space of possible research claims or “position-takings.” Scientists anticipate a certain risk and reward profile from each region.

  7. science is all about is still strongly antitraditional. It is primarily against this hardened liberal-positivist conception of science that Kuhn forwards his revisionist arguments.