Saturday 17 July 2021

Sociology of Science- Paradigms in Science and Paradigm shift

 Sociology of Science

 

Ralte, Rodinmawia. The Interface of Science and Religion: An Introductory Study. New Delhi: Christian World Imprints, 2017.

Murphy, Raymond. The Sociological Construction of Science Without Nature, Sociology, (Vol.28, No. 4, November, 1994), 57.

Henry, Sarojini. The Encounter of Faith and Science in Inter-Religious Dialogue. New Delhi: ISPCK, 2005.

 

Sociology of science deals with the social conditions and effects of science and with the social structures and processes of scientific activity. Science is a cultural tradition, preserved and transmitted from generation to generation partly because it is valued in its own right and partly because of its wide technological applications. The Sociology of science seeks to establish as specifically and precisely as possible the social conditions under which science makes maximal progress. Sociologist of science has concentrated on this characteristic of science as a tradition and as an institution.

 

Science can err and it has erred. We have seen that science is not free from the influence of society, religion and personal inclination and emotion of scientific researches which make scientific research subjective at least partially. Both science and religion are the products of human beings and by nature limited thence should be taken together as complementing rather than competing, enriching one another than encroaching, having dialogical relationship as both are attempts to unearth the inexhaustible reality of God and his creation.

 

According to Pierre Bourdieu, a French Sociologist, and Philosopher, the sociology of science rests on the postulate that the objective truth of the product- even in the case of that very particular product, scientific truth- lies in a particular type of social conditions of production, or more precisely, in s determinate state of the structure and functioning of the scientific field. The pure universe of even the purest science I a social field like any others, with its distribution of power and its monopolies, its struggles and strategies, interests and profits, but it is a field in which all these invariants take on specific forms.

 

Development of Sociology of Science

 

The Sociology of science has undergone considerable growth and diversification in recent years. Early sociology of science was developed within philosophical debates regarding the nature of science and the social bases of knowledge in general. Karl Mannheim and Max Scheler in the 1920s gave these discussions on especially sociological bent. In the 1930s, the theme was made into explicit sociology of science both by Marxists and by the functionalist Robert Merton, and both approaches were followed up during the next 30 years.

Sociology of science became flourishing research area in the early the 1960s, with the publication of works by a number of scholars, such as Derek Price, Thomas Kuhn, Joseph Ben-David, and Warren Hagstrom. In the 1970s, sociology of science burgeoned into a variety of approaches: citation and network studies, conflict theory, social constructivism, ethnomethologically-influence studies of laboratory life and others.

The idealized functionalist image of science has largely given way more to the critical, relativist, and highly empirical approaches to science.  Today, sociology of science is becoming one of the blooming disciplines in sociology, and its contributions in terms of estimating the influence of science on social conditions and vice versa is commendable.

Social Construction of Science

The social construction of science means the social influences on science and scientific theories, research and discoveries, and on the content of scientific knowledge. The predominant conception of science has been one of the accumulations of impartial, objective knowledge of nature by disinterested scientists. This conception is associated with an image of science as conflict-free and as the reflection of natural reality. In reaction to this conception, contemporary studies in the sociology of science have drawn attention to the was scientific knowledge is socially constructed and to the relative rather than the absolute character of that knowledge. The age-old view that science is objective, rational and the only reliable path to knowledge is now challenged by many sociologists of science. However, the use of the term ‘social construction’ in science studies started to become common in the mid-1970s.

The philosopher Ian Hacking has discussed and criticized different uses of the concept of social construction. Hacking (1999) takes apart and analyzes the many and varying meanings of social construction. According to Hacking, the concept is routinely used in a way that makes it devoid of meaning. ”The phrase has become code. Hacking found three main types: contingency, nominalism, and external reasons for stability (Sismondo 2004). The first kind of social constructivism essentially comes to mean that things could have been different – there was nothing inevitable about the current state of affairs and it was not determined by the nature of things. The second kind of social constructivism focuses on the politics of categories and points to how classifications are always human impositions rather than natural kinds. The third kind of social constructivism points to how stability and success in scientific theories are due to external, rather than evidential, reasons.

 

“Society” has been ruined by sociologists and social constructivists, as they have made sure that it has been purged of what Bruno Latour calls not objects, but ”nonhumans.” If the social constructivist is to be believed, says Latour, only social relations exist in society. Furthermore, as nature is not awarded a reality status in its own right, but is simply a series of social inscriptions, the entire project becomes tautological. Latour thus disputes what he calls a dualist paradigm and seeks to avoid a subject-object distinction altogether. As ”society” has become tainted, he prefers instead the notion of ”collective.” This collective is extended to include nonhumans as well as humans. Latour’s society is constructed, but not socially constructed.

 

Sociologists insisted that our knowledge is socially constructed and this shakes scientific foundations and religious beliefs as well. Scientific research is also subject to dogma and clinging to old theories. Scientific theories are theory-laden, not theory-free. Scientists are now talking less of definite laws but more of probability, less determinism, more of hypothetical theories, less of truth, and more of models and metaphors,

 

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