What exactly is science, and how should it shape our understanding of the world?
This clear, accessible study untangles what counts as science, how scientific knowledge is built, and why careful definitions matter for progress. It invites readers to consider the grounds, methods, and limits of scientific inquiry.
From the author’s long-standing aim to show how science rests on thoughtful questions, precise language, and disciplined reasoning, this work examines how different fields become reliable bodies of knowledge. It contrasts everyday knowledge with the reflective, organized knowledge that science pursues, and it explains why a shared standard helps science advance a rational, unified view of the universe. The book also invites readers to reflect on the role of imagination, observation, and critique in scientific discovery.
What you’ll experience:
- An explanation of what makes a science and how definitions shape understanding
- Discussion of the scientific method, certainty, and probability
- Insights into the imagination’s role in discovery and the limits of scientific knowledge
- Connections between science and ethics, philosophy, and society
Ideal for curious readers of philosophy, science history, and anyone who wants a grounded view of how scientific knowledge is built and tested.