Slattery, Martin (2003): Key ideas in sociology. Cheltenham: Nelson Thornes. [2]ISBN 9780748765652
Nickles, Thomas (2002): Thomas Kuhn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [3] Cita: Thomas Kuhn (1922–1996), the author of The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, is probably the best-known and most influential historian and philosopher of science of the last 25 years, and has become something of a cultural icon. His concepts of paradigm, paradigm change and incommensurability have changed the way we think about science. ISBN 9780521792066
oxforddictionaries.com
paradigmnoun1 a typical example or pattern of something; a pattern or model: society‘s paradigm of the’ ideal woman. ♦ a world view underlying the theories and methodology of a particular scientific subject. 2Linguistics a set of linguistic items that form mutually exclusive choices in particular syntactic roles. Often contrasted with SYNTAGM. 3 (in the traditional grammar of Latin, Greek, and other inflected languages) a table of all the inflected forms of a particular verb, noun, or adjective, serving as a model for other words of the same conjugation or declension. Oxford Dictionaries Online. [1]Arquivado 18 de outubro de 2010 en Wayback Machine.
web.archive.org
paradigma s.m. 1.Gram. Forma ou conxunto de formas que se toman como modelo para a flexión dun substantivo, verbo etc. O paradigma dunha declinación. O paradigma da 1ª conxugación. ‘Andar’ segue o paradigma dos verbos regulares. 2.Ling. Conxunto de palabras dunha mesma clase que poden ser substituíbles nun punto determinado da cadea falada. As palabras camisa, saia, chambra etc., constitúen un paradigma porque figuran no contexto: A... é unha peza de vestir. Diccionario da Real Academia GalegaArquivado 22 de febreiro de 2012 en Wayback Machine.
paradigmnoun1 a typical example or pattern of something; a pattern or model: society‘s paradigm of the’ ideal woman. ♦ a world view underlying the theories and methodology of a particular scientific subject. 2Linguistics a set of linguistic items that form mutually exclusive choices in particular syntactic roles. Often contrasted with SYNTAGM. 3 (in the traditional grammar of Latin, Greek, and other inflected languages) a table of all the inflected forms of a particular verb, noun, or adjective, serving as a model for other words of the same conjugation or declension. Oxford Dictionaries Online. [1]Arquivado 18 de outubro de 2010 en Wayback Machine.
xunta.es
edu.xunta.es
paradigma s.m. 1.Gram. Forma ou conxunto de formas que se toman como modelo para a flexión dun substantivo, verbo etc. O paradigma dunha declinación. O paradigma da 1ª conxugación. ‘Andar’ segue o paradigma dos verbos regulares. 2.Ling. Conxunto de palabras dunha mesma clase que poden ser substituíbles nun punto determinado da cadea falada. As palabras camisa, saia, chambra etc., constitúen un paradigma porque figuran no contexto: A... é unha peza de vestir. Diccionario da Real Academia GalegaArquivado 22 de febreiro de 2012 en Wayback Machine.