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An Evolutionary Note about "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" by Thomas Kuhn

8/12/2025

6 Comments

 
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Last week, I finally submitted an epistemology paper for publication that I’ve been working on for several years. It’s very ambitious and I can’t wait to share it when/if it gets accepted. But in the meantime, I have some thoughts to share on a couple of books that I read during the research on that project. The first is Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
 
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Kuhn starts by saying he “is one of the most influential philosophers of science of the twentieth century, perhaps the most influential. His 1962 book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions is one of the most cited academic books of all time.” In it, Kuhn distinguished between “normal science”—which simply grows the dominant “paradigm” in its field—and “revolutionary science”—which upends paradigms so thoroughly that scientists on each side of the divide can no longer understand one another. This is Kuhn’s controversial “incommensurability thesis”, which posits that theories from differing periods suffer from deep failures of comparability.
 
Mountains of criticism have been written about this, which you can quickly see summarized in the SEP entry, as well as in Wikipedia. In a postscript written seven years after TSoSR was first published, Kuhn himself admits that his definition of paradigm is “intrinsically circular”. (“A paradigm is what the members of a scientific community share, and, conversely, a scientific community consists of men who share a paradigm.”) But the most damning criticism to me was that “the philosophical reception was…hostile. For example, Dudley Shapere’s review (1964) emphasized the relativist implications of Kuhn’s ideas, and this set the context for much subsequent philosophical discussion. Since the following of rules (of logic, of scientific method, etc.) was regarded as the sine qua non of rationality, Kuhn’s claim that scientists do not employ rules in reaching their decisions appeared tantamount to the claim that science is irrational.”
 
Boooo! Yes, there are countless examples to share of scientists behaving badly and any good scholar can unearth them. But these are all failures of individual scientists, not a feature of the scientific method. The very reason Kuhn and other critics of science point them out is because they go against what science demands. The stories are certainly not held up as exemplars of what future scientists should do.
 
I also don’t honestly understand how Kuhn could have put forth a theory about the incommensurability of ideas pre- and post- a “scientific revolution” while at the same time explaining them in such detail that he and the reader can understand why the ideas changed so much. If he can write about all of this, then surely expert scientists can grasp the differences too! Wittgenstein already helped us decide that purely private language is not possible. So incommensurable scientific theories are out too.
 
And yet, despite these criticisms, much of TSoSR contains incredibly admirable scholarly work on the history of science. Kuhn profiled many major and minor theories that have been developed over the past several centuries. And for that, TSoSR is still worth the read. But I probably wouldn’t have bothered writing a post about this book except for the fact that Kuhn ended TSoSR with a comparison to evolution. And “in 1995 Kuhn argued that the Darwinian metaphor in the book should have been taken more seriously than it had been.” Well, that’s just begging for this blog to take a look and weigh in.
 
Here, then, are the main evolutionary points that Kuhn made. All quotations below are from the second edition of TSoSR.
 
  • p.171 “All the well-known pre-Darwinian evolutionary theories—those of Lamarck, Chambers, Spencer, and the German Naturphilosophen—had taken evolution to be a goal-directed process.”
  • p.172 “For many men the abolition of that teleological kind of evolution was the most significant and least palatable of Darwin’s suggestions. The Origin of Species recognized no goal set either by God or nature.”
  • p.172 “The analogy that relates the evolution of organisms to the evolution of scientific ideas can easily be pushed too far. But with respect to the issues of this closing section it is very nearly perfect.”
  • pp.172-3 “the entire [scientific] process may have occurred, as we now suppose biological evolution did, without benefit of a set goal, a permanent fixed scientific truth, of which each stage in the development of scientific knowledge is a better exemplar.”
  • p.173 “Why should scientific communities be able to reach a firm consensus unattainable in other fields? Why should consensus endure across one paradigm change after another? And why should paradigm change invariably produce an instrument more perfect in any sense than those known before? …those questions…are as open as they were when this essay began. It is not only the scientific community that must be special. The world of which that community is a part must also possess quite special characteristics, and we are no closer than we were at the start to knowing what these must be. …it need not be answered in this place.”
 
Ugh! The evolution of organisms and the evolution of scientific ideas are extremely different things. They are not “very nearly perfect” for analogous analysis. Biological life has emerged and evolved into the vacuum of a non-living universe. Random mutations, scarce resources, and eons of natural selection have created “from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful” (as Darwin famously described). Life has immense freedom to create survival mechanisms within this space of possibilities. But scientific ideas are not like this at all. They are highly constrained truth-seeking hypotheses that evolve via empirically-driven imaginations (not random mutations), which compete to be the best rationally-selected predictions. This is not at all like brute, unthinking, goalless, natural selection.
 
As I wrote in the epistemology paper that I recently finished (see a draft sketch here), there are plenty of skeptical arguments that have come down to us through the ages (e.g. Socrates, Pyrrho, Descartes, Hume, Gettier, Putnam, Bostrom), which  show us why the evolution of scientific ideas never actually reach “a permanent fixed scientific truth.” But that is indeed the goal, despite what Kuhn would argue. The question of why scientific communities are able to reach consensus is easily answered when we posit that our universe (not multiverses) is an objective, knowable, thing that we keep trying to grasp through our subjective lenses. Only a very twisted view of science as a mere relativistic construction of ideas would see it otherwise. But that view doesn’t hang together at all and can therefore be dismissed.
 
One of the most cited academic books of all time? What a shame.
6 Comments
John A. Johnson link
8/12/2025 06:58:57 pm

My view of Kuhn is more positive, perhaps because when I first read TSoSR in the 1970s, his ideas seemed to dovetail beautifully with a number of other works that I read at the time: Stephen Pepper's World Hypotheses, Richard Price's Abnormal Behavior: Perspectives in Conflict, Arturo Rosenblueth and Norbert Wiener's The Role of Models in Science, Donald Alan Schon's Displacement of Concepts, and Norwood Russel Hanson's Patterns of Discovery. A theme running through these works is that scientific inquiry involves the perceptions of patterns in nature, and that perceived patterns in one domain can serve to interpret patterns in another through analogy or even metaphor (e.g., the mind is a computer). Once a scientist perceives a pattern, it becomes impossible to unsee it, which leads to the theory-ladenness of observation. But any perceived patterning within one's theory is only one of many possible ways of representing nature, and will always be incomplete and imperfect because our brains are finite and the universe, vast. Our best scientific models or maps will certainly correspond to the objective universe in some fashion, but it is unlikely to correspond perfectly. The map is not the territory. Historically, science has kept creating new models that strike those who adopt the new model as preferable. However it is hard to know whether the new model is somehow objectively more true (a better correspondence) or just aesthetically more pleasing. Personally, I believe in scientific progress, not all change in science represents progress.

Is the analogy between scientific change and biological evolution a good one? I think that it can be. I see a definite correspondence between natural selection weeding out life forms that do not reproduce as successfully as others and the community of science weeding out theories that are less consistent with accepted assumptions and observations. But what about the random part (represented in biological domain by mutation, drift, rapid environmental change, and so forth)? I suggest that at least sometimes new perceived patternings simply spring, unexpectedly, into the minds of scientific researchers. Like the Magic Eye stereograms in which suddenly the hidden image appears to the brain. Or staring at a Necker cube and suddenly seeing the other alternative. I think the most famous example of this in science is Kekulé's dream of the ouroboros allowing him to see the structure of benzene as a ring, but I suspect that such flashes of insight occur often in scientific discoveries. I know that this is what has happened multiple times in my own research career.

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Ed Gibney link
8/13/2025 06:45:29 am

Thanks, John. I was really hoping someone would share some positive associations with Kuhn. I know it's possible to have them. Especially as a corrective to any overly naive scientism that one gets taught.

First, on the analogy between biological evolution and scientific change: Yes, of course there are some analogous ways in which these both do "evolve". Heck, my epistemology paper is called "On the Origin of Knowledge" in a distinct homage to Darwin. But the way that Kuhn tries to make the analogy pushes it too far in my estimation. The disanalogies between open-ended biological evolution and the constrained truth-seeking evolution of scientific theories mean to me that biology should not offer a guide to the way Kuhn wants us to think about scientific change as moving in a goalless meandering way. That view is deeply troubling to me and does nothing to explain scientific progress. Kuhn himself admits that is still a mystery to him.

By the way, I really like these two papers from Maartin Boudry (and others) for evaluating the positives and negatives of the use of metaphors in science.

— Why Machine-Information Metaphors are Bad for Science and Science Education (https://philarchive.org/rec/PIGWMM)

— Demystifying mysteries. How metaphors and analogies extend the reach of the human mind (https://philpapers.org/rec/BOUDMH)

I would push back on your suggestion that "at least sometimes new perceived patternings simply spring, unexpectedly, into the minds of scientific researchers". Where exactly do these come from? In my post, I described this in passing as "via empirically-driven imaginations". But in more detail now, I would say that our minds can only work with what they have encountered. But there are lots of subconscious networks running trials and errors with this information and when the right combinations start to work they can achieve "fame in the brain" (a la Global Workspace theory) and thereby *spring* to consciousness. This, to me, perfectly explains the examples you gave, but it is very different from the random mutations of biological evolution.

As for the broader points about Kuhn and science, yes, I agree he was part of a movement emphasizing that science (and knowledge in general) are social constructions. I will agree wholeheartedly that "Our best scientific models or maps will certainly correspond to the objective universe in some fashion, but it is unlikely to correspond perfectly." But I wouldn't go so far as to say "it is hard to know whether the new model is somehow objectively more true (a better correspondence) or just aesthetically more pleasing." There are times in early science where this is difficult to know, but that's the point of my epistemology paper—that as more and more observers and opinions weigh in, science can move up the ladder of trustworthiness to established science and then broad consensus. That was the general thesis of Naomi Oreskes' book "Why Trust Science?" and I've fleshed that out with more details and made the case for how it applies to knowledge in general. I hope to share the final version of that soon.

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John A. Johnson link
8/13/2025 01:39:52 pm

As usual, Ed, I see our differences as trivial compared to our points of agreement. The potential analogy between science and biological evolution is just that: an analogy. Analogies and metaphors are neither true nor false, although I think we can judge their usefulness by the number of puzzles that they eventually help to solve through normal science. So, yes, creative insights that just appear in our heads are very different from random mutations--they share only the quality of being unpredictable. Certainly in science it is impossible to have a creative insight "magically" appear without tons of observation, reflection, and incubation. Indeed, insights are "empirically-driven." At the same time, we cannot force an insight to appear by staring at data and following regimented procedures and formulas. The scientific method is great for testing hypotheses, but there is no method for coming up with a good hypothesis--to my mind, the most important part of doing science. Early in my career, I hoped to better understand the psychology of hypothesis formation. Reichenbach's discussions of the context of discovery and Peirce's discussions of abductive inference (as well as psychological research on the creative process) gave me hope, but in the end I had no new insights on the generation of insights. 😉

I totally agree with you on the troublesomeness of Kuhn's suggestion that scientific change is goalless and meandering. In an earlier draft of my reply, I had a sentence taking issue with the idea that science is a random walk. Certainly there is a fair amount of puttering around in science with many dead-ends, but the goal of true knowledge is always there. And good theories are eventually vindicated by evidence, my favorite dramatic example being the detonation of the first nuclear explosion that supported the theory that energy is equal to mass times the speed of light, squared.

Thanks for the Maartin Boudry references; I look forward to reading them. Metaphors in the role of new knowledge has been a topic of lifelong interest for me.

Ed Gibney link
8/13/2025 01:59:36 pm

Excellent, Dr. J! I have nothing to respond to that response other than to say that I do hope you enjoy the Boudry papers. Email me if you have trouble accessing them, I'm sure I have pdf's of them somewhere. My old online philosophy group discussed them a lot when we talked about whether "mental immunity" (from Andy Norman) is *just* a metaphor or not. If you push hard enough, however, all of language is a metaphor. So, yeah, it comes down to using them only as far as they are useful.

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SelfAwarePatterns link
8/13/2025 05:44:33 pm

I've owned a copy of Kuhn's book for years, but never gotten around to reading it. The idea of a scientific paradigm, as often described in quick summaries, makes a type of sense to me. But I take it to be the meta-theories used to assess individual scientific theories. In other words, it is itself a theory, one that occasionally needs substantive revision.

As long as we're not taking those revisions just to be fashion trends, that there isn't any actual progress happening, I'm onboard. But if the idea that each successive paradigm shift doesn't represent progress, then this view of science seems to ignore the difference between our lives and those of people living in 1500 CE.

It seems like often a work is heavily cited by other work just for completeness, and for acknowledging a contrary view. I'd be surprised if the majority of those citations are taking it as authoritative. But I might well be all wet.

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Ed Gibney link
8/14/2025 08:12:10 am

Ha! I don't think you need to rush to get that book off your shelf. But Kuhn's use of "paradigm" is a little more exact than that. A part of it that is required is that the paradigm leaves unanswered questions that can promote the "puzzle solving" of "normal science" (those are key Kuhn phrases in scare quotes). That is what enables scientists to keep developing a paradigm. Only when anomalies are unable to be answered, and when a new theory emerges that can replace the old paradigm, will a new paradigm emerge. He talks extensively about Newton's vs. Einstein's paradigms as good examples.

I'm sure you are right that many citations of his work are shallow or contradictory, but I have met some social scientists in particular who think science is relativistic *as per* Kuhn. And that's a shame. As I started reading TSoSR, I thought all these people must be misinterpreting this great work of scholarship. But as you get toward the end it becomes clear Kuhn doesn't really understand why science has progressed since 1500CE. I found passages that show he seems to be looking for very exact answers to questions like "when was oxygen discovered?". He is a very detail-oriented scholar after all. But even though he finished TSoSR with a thought about its analogousness to evolution, he doesn't seem to think in terms of gradualism with scientific theories. He really wants clear bright lines. And when he doesn't find them, he resorts to this talk of "revolutionary science" and "incommensurability". But all you really need are fuzzy boundaries that people easily operate across.

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