Introduction

Geert Somsen, Harmke Kamminga

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademic

Abstract

A whole body of work has revealed the local, the particular and the culturally variable contexts that constitute science in its various branches. The explicit promotion of the unity of science in the interwar years is best known from the Unity of Science Movement set up by the philosophers of the Vienna Circle. Otto Neurath, Rudolph Carnap and their fellows strove to unify all science into a single body of knowledge, stripped of any 'dogmatic', 'metaphysical' and otherwise unscientific contaminations. The world in which interwar pursuits of the unity of science emerged was one of deep division and splintering antagonism. Interwar unity of science pursuits, however, were distinguished by their enormous scope and their often overt political commitment. The promotion of unified science as a rational basis for social planning and international cooperation formed a collective answer to the feeling of general devastation that followed the Great War.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationPursuing the Unity of Science
Subtitle of host publicationIdeology and Scientific Practice from the Great War to the Cold War
PublisherRoutledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Pages1-11
Number of pages11
ISBN (Electronic)9781315603094
ISBN (Print)9780754640356, 9780815366805
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Publication series

SeriesScience, Technology and Culture, 1700 - 1945

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