01666cam a2200373 a 450000100090000000300040000900500170001300800410003001000170007102000420008802000390013002000460016902000430021502000240025802000270028203500130030904000270032204200080034905000200035708200120037710000200038924501070040925000200051626000660053630000270060233600210062933700250065033800230067550400510069850504780074965000250122765000220125270000180127416998003OSt20250828090848.0111011t20122012ilu b 001 0 eng c a 2011042476 a9780226458113qcloth : alkaline paper a0226458113qcloth : alkaline paper a9780226458120qpaperback : alkaline paper a0226458121qpaperback : alkaline paper z0226458148 (e-book) z9780226458144 (e-book) a16998003 aICU/DLCbengcICUdDLC apcc00aQ175b.K95 201200a5012231 aKuhn, Thomas S.14aThe structure of scientific revolutions /cThomas S. Kuhn ; with an introductory essay by Ian Hacking. aFourth edition. aChicago ;aLondon :bThe University of Chicago Press,cc2012. axlvi, 217 p. ;c22 cm. atext2rdacontent aunmediated2rdamedia avolume2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references and index.0 aA role for history -- The route to normal science -- The nature of normal science -- Normal science as puzzle-solving -- The priority of paradigms -- Anomaly and the emergence of scientific discoveries -- Crisis and the emergence of scientific theories -- The response to crisis -- The nature and necessity of scientific revolutions -- Revolutions as changes of world view -- The invisibility of revolutions -- The resolution of revolutions -- Progress through revolutions. 0aSciencexPhilosophy. 0aSciencexHistory.1 aHacking, Ian.