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  1. Science consists in progress by innovation. Scientists, however, are committed to all kinds of traditions that persist or recur in society regardless of intellectual and institutional changes.

  2. 1 de sept. de 2015 · Scientists can introduce novel chemicals and chemical relationships (innovation) or delve deeper into known ones (tradition). They can consolidate knowledge clusters or bridge them. The aggregate distribution of published strategies remains remarkably stable.

  3. 13 de ago. de 2004 · A collection of Kuhn’s essays in the philosophy and history of science was published in 1977, with the title The Essential Tension taken from one of Kuhn’s earliest essays in which he emphasizes the importance of tradition in science.

  4. Tradition in Science: Author: Werner Heisenberg: Publisher: Seabury Press, 1983: Original from: the University of Michigan: Digitized: Jan 29, 2010: ISBN: 0816424888, 9780816424887: Length:...

  5. 4 de mar. de 2004 · Thus, it is crucial to identify the salient features of distinct aspects of the scientific tradition, namely, science itself, the philosophical view known as scientific realism, the metaphysical ideology of scientific materialism, and the dogmatic form of that ideology known as scientism.

  6. Tradition in Science. W. Heisenberg. Published in The Idea of the University 1 June 1974. Physics. The Idea of the University. “… on the practical side, we have to solve the very urgent problems put by the deterioration of our environment.

  7. 7 de mar. de 1998 · The pursuit of science as I understand the term is not in tune with every kind of intellectual tradition. I have now come to the point where I must clarify, however briefly, where I stand on the question of tradition. Tradition is what links present practices with past ones: it is the past in the present. No society is created exnihilo