Literature & Science: Paradigm Shifts Implicit in the Works of Goethe (Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe) (Critical Essay) Literature & Science: Paradigm Shifts Implicit in the Works of Goethe (Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe) (Critical Essay)

Literature & Science: Paradigm Shifts Implicit in the Works of Goethe (Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe) (Critical Essay‪)‬

Traffic (Parkville) 2004, July, 5

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Descrizione dell’editore

Literature and science have a closer relationship than may at first meet the eye. In this paper, the catalytic function of literature in effecting important new ways of seeing and conceptualising the world of the scientist is predicated. As background to this argument, some of the major paradigm shifts that have brought us from a classical Newtonian, mechanistic world to a modern quantum perspective are discussed. Early quantum scientists themselves refer to literary ideas impacting upon their vision of reality; with this in mind, important philosophical ideas that are played out in Goethe's works and which helped to galvanise a paradigm shift in science are discussed. My personal vision is a reinstatement of the importance of the arts to science and to human understanding. Literature and philosophy form two important catalytic sources of new ideas stimulating the creative unconscious of the scientist's mind, providing a springboard for the ultimate new leaps which have advanced us from a mechanistic Newtonian understanding of life to a dynamic quantum framework. One example of this can be seen in the works of the great German writer, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The argument for the crucial role of literature and philosophy in scientific conceptualisation is based on three logical steps: one, that a pre-existing conceptual framework influences the way a scientist interprets what is seen in an experiment or an observation; two, that important paradigm shifts are necessary to make new interpretations of data, and to facilitate the major scientific advancements we have made; and three, that these shifts in paradigm or framework do not materialise out of nowhere, but come from the surrounding discourse of the scientist's era. Goethe's late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century writings, in which he dramatises and plays through important philosophical ideas and visions, contributed to a change in the philosophical and thus scientific understanding of reality influencing the development of twentieth-century quantum mechanics.

GENERE
Consultazione
PUBBLICATO
2004
1 luglio
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
28
EDITORE
University of Melbourne Postgraduate Association
DIMENSIONE
378
KB

Altri libri di Traffic (Parkville)

Something is Rotten in Blue Velvet ... an Exploration of David Lynch's Blue Velvet Via Shakespeare's Hamlet. Something is Rotten in Blue Velvet ... an Exploration of David Lynch's Blue Velvet Via Shakespeare's Hamlet.
2006
Re-Imagining the Female Hysteric: Helene Cixous' Portrait of Dora (Critical Essay) Re-Imagining the Female Hysteric: Helene Cixous' Portrait of Dora (Critical Essay)
2008
Burn What They should Not See': Family Secrets in A S Byatt's Possession (Report) Burn What They should Not See': Family Secrets in A S Byatt's Possession (Report)
2009
Hordes and Massed Machines: Samuel Huntington in Russia (History) Hordes and Massed Machines: Samuel Huntington in Russia (History)
2005
'the Spiritual Mind': The Neuroscience of Spiritual Experience. 'the Spiritual Mind': The Neuroscience of Spiritual Experience.
2006
Does a Sweet Tasting Sugar Solution Reduce Pain During Blood Tests in Sick Babies?(Clinical Report) Does a Sweet Tasting Sugar Solution Reduce Pain During Blood Tests in Sick Babies?(Clinical Report)
2002