Review
A genuinely original argument in the philosophy of science is a rare thing indeed. Bhaskar has produced a new... strong, elaborate and well-integrated, elegant and powerful argument. - Rom Harre, Mind 1977
A remarkably interesting and stimulating book in an area of philosophy in which such books have become all too rare. - S. Korner, Times Literary Supplement 1975
A genuinely original argument in the philosophy of science is a rare thing indeed. Bhaskar has produced a new . . . strong, elaborate and well-integrated, elegant and powerful argument. --Rom Harre (Mind 1977)
A remarkably interesting and stimulating book in an area of philosophy in which such books have become all too rare --S. Korner (Times Literary Supplement 1975)
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Product Description
This brilliant, systematic and original study describes how only a conception of science as a social activity attempting to capture ever-deeper structures of the world can reconcile the conflicting insights of empiricism and rationalism. This position, which the author characterizes as transcendental realism, has the power to resolve many of the traditional problems in philosophy such as the problems of induction and of universals.
See all Editorial Reviews