International Relations. A self-Study Guide to Theory
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International Relations (Theory)
creation myths that describe and explain how the world came into being and
how death and the periodical cycles of season evolved. Other myths reflect on the dualisms of dark and light, heaven and earth, or matter and mind. Evidence for such mythological perceptions of the universe has been found all over the world: myths of the world and of divine creation exist in Chinese, Japanese, In- donesian, Indian, African and many other cultures. The first “scientific ele- ments” have been ascribed to the physical world view of the peasant societies of the Neolithic Age in Europe (around 7000 BC). These societies had ideas and models of a flat earth embedded in the sea with a dome-shaped heaven car- rying the sun, the moon and the stars, all created by gods (Bedenig 2011: 31). In a more narrow sense, however, European history generally attributes the emergence of the idea of science to philosophical thought in Greek antiq- uity. Greek philosophy is still appreciated today for having invented the sci- entific method of interpreting observations by a theory, for the idea of using theory to make predictions for unknown phenomena, for the principle of veri- 75 fying a theory, and for the idea of a clear separation of science and religion (an excellent overview is provided by Bedenig 2011: 33-48). As has been in- dicated above by the example of the geocentric world view, it was by using scientific methods of systematic observation and mathematical calculation that the Greeks came to know that the earth was a sphere and assumed that it must be the center of the universe. Ptolemy and his followers formulated these findings in their geocentric geometric model. The world views as de- scribed above are “scientific” in that they formulate assumptions, theories and hypotheses about the world/the universe in a systematic way and invent methods to come to know about the world. They reject traditional mythologi- cal explanations of the phenomena in favor of “rational” explanations. This adoption of rational explanations occurred as early as the so-called Pre-Socratics, who asked fundamental questions about the “essence” of “things”. These questions included: what is and from where does everything come (ontological questions about being); how do we explain the things and objects we see (epistemological questions about knowing). They also tried to describe nature mathematically. The questions, problems and paradoxes at the core of pre-Socratic thought became the basis for modern mathematics, philosophy and science in general. In the history of Greek philosophy and in subsequent periods, there have been different answers to those fundamental questions. However, the core questions and problems of what is, how to know something, and which methods are needed to obtain that knowledge have remained throughout history, right through to the present. In fact, the very idea of systematic thought in terms of ontology, epistemology and methodology – the core of the idea of science – goes back to the philosophy of Greek antiquity! This period fundamentally shaped the core questions and hence the core subject of what is now called philosophy of science, as de- fined as a sub-discipline of philosophy (see our discussion in Unit 2). In short, Greek philosophy heavily influenced our modern idea of science, which was developed in an historical process of European philosophy now encompassing more than 2500 years. To understand our idea of science and the prestigious status science has gained in our societies today, it is worth taking a closer look at some ancient Greek positions in regard to ontological, epistemological and methodological questions. Particularly interesting are those questions and problems for which there have been competing positions and arguments. For example, the early belief existed that true knowledge could only be gained by applying strict rationality – meaning both logical reasoning and Download 0.79 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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