அறிவியலின் மெய்யியல் (Tamil Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "அறிவியலின் மெய்யியல்" in Tamil language version.

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amazon.com (Global: 105th place; Tamil: 329th place)

archive.org (Global: 6th place; Tamil: 8th place)

books.google.com (Global: 3rd place; Tamil: 6th place)

britannica.com (Global: 40th place; Tamil: 21st place)

  • பிரித்தானிக்கா கலைக்களஞ்சியம்: Thomas S. Kuhn. "மாறாகக் குறிப்பிட்ட காலச் சிந்தனைச் சட்டகம் தான் அறிவியலார் செய்யவேண்டிய செய்முறை வகைகளையும் கேட்கப்படவேண்டிய கேள்வி வகைகளையும் முதன்மையானதாகக் கருதப்படத் தக்க சிக்கல்களையும் தீர்மானிக்கிறது என்றார்."

columbia.edu (Global: 488th place; Tamil: 173rd place)

neurotheory.columbia.edu

doi.org (Global: 2nd place; Tamil: 4th place)

dx.doi.org

drury.edu (Global: low place; Tamil: low place)

  • "Popper, Falsifiability, and the Failure of Positivism". 7 August 2000. Archived from the original on 7 ஜனவரி 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2012. The upshot is that the positivists seem caught between insisting on the V.C. [Verifiability Criterion]—but for no defensible reason—or admitting that the V.C. requires a background language, etc., which opens the door to relativism, etc. In light of this dilemma, many folk—especially following Popper's "last-ditch" effort to "save" empiricism/positivism/realism with the falsifiability criterion—have agreed that positivism is a dead-end. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)

loc.gov (Global: 70th place; Tamil: 248th place)

lccn.loc.gov

  • Smith, L.D. (1986). Behaviorism and Logical Positivism: A Reassessment of the Alliance. Stanford University Press. p. 314. ISBN 9780804713016. LCCN 85030366. The secondary and historical literature on logical positivism affords substantial grounds for concluding that logical positivism failed to solve many of the central problems it generated for itself. Prominent among the unsolved problems was the failure to find an acceptable statement of the verifiability (later confirmability) criterion of meaningfulness. Until a competing tradition emerged (about the late 1950's), the problems of logical positivism continued to be attacked from within that tradition. But as the new tradition in the philosophy of science began to demonstrate its effectiveness—by dissolving and rephrasing old problems as well as by generating new ones—philosophers began to shift allegiances to the new tradition, even though that tradition has yet to receive a canonical formulation.
  • Bunge, M.A. (1996). Finding Philosophy in Social Science. Yale University Press. p. 317. ISBN 9780300066067. LCCN lc96004399. To conclude, logical positivism was progressive compared with the classical positivism of Ptolemy, Hume, d'Alembert, Compte, John Stuart Mill, and Ernst Mach. It was even more so by comparison with its contemporary rivals—neo-Thomisism, neo-Kantianism, intuitionism, dialectical materialism, phenomenology, and existentialism. However, neo-positivism failed dismally to give a faithful account of science, whether natural or social. It failed because it remained anchored to sense-data and to a phenomenalist metaphysics, overrated the power of induction and underrated that of hypothesis, and denounced realism and materialism as metaphysical nonsense. Although it has never been practiced consistently in the advanced natural sciences and has been criticized by many philosophers, notably Popper (1959 [1935], 1963), logical positivism remains the tacit philosophy of many scientists. Regrettably, the anti-positivism fashionable in the metatheory of social science is often nothing but an excuse for sloppiness and wild speculation.

stanford.edu (Global: 179th place; Tamil: 197th place)

plato.stanford.edu

  • Thornton, Stephen (2006). "Karl Popper". Stanford மெய்யியல் களஞ்சியம். Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  • Uebel, Thomas (2006). "Vienna Circle". Stanford மெய்யியல் களஞ்சியம். Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  • Woodward, James (2003). "அறிவியல் விளக்கம்". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  • Vickers, John (2013). "The Problem of Induction". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
  • Baker, Alan (2013). "Simplicity". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
  • Bogen, Jim (2013). "Theory and Observation in Science". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
  • Boyd, Richard (2002). "Scientific Realism". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  • Longino, Helen (2013). "The Social Dimensions of Scientific Knowledge". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2014-03-06.
  • "John Stuart Mill (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)". plato.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2009-07-31.
  • See "Vienna Circle" in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Stanford Encyclopaedia: Auguste Comte

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; Tamil: 1st place)

  • "Popper, Falsifiability, and the Failure of Positivism". 7 August 2000. Archived from the original on 7 ஜனவரி 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2012. The upshot is that the positivists seem caught between insisting on the V.C. [Verifiability Criterion]—but for no defensible reason—or admitting that the V.C. requires a background language, etc., which opens the door to relativism, etc. In light of this dilemma, many folk—especially following Popper's "last-ditch" effort to "save" empiricism/positivism/realism with the falsifiability criterion—have agreed that positivism is a dead-end. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)

wikisource.org (Global: 27th place; Tamil: 26th place)

ta.wikisource.org

  • Bacon, Francis Novum Organum (The New Organon), 1620. Bacon's work described many of the accepted principles, underscoring the importance of empirical results, data gathering and experiment. Encyclopædia Britannica (1911), "Bacon, Francis" states: [In Novum Organum, we ] "proceed to apply what is perhaps the most valuable part of the Baconian method, the process of exclusion or rejection. This elimination of the non-essential, ..., is the most important of Bacon's contributions to the logic of induction, and that in which, as he repeatedly says, his method differs from all previous philosophies."