Bukharin and the Social Study of Science

Studies in East European Thought 67 (1-2):75-89 (2015)
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Abstract

This paper studies Bukharin’s Theory and Practice from the Standpoint of Dialectical Materialism presented at the 2nd International Congress of the History of Science in London, June 29–July 3, 1931. Bukharin’s paper has not received the attention it deserves despite the fact that it provides the theoretical framework for the paper mostly highlighted in this Congress, Boris Hessen’s The Social and Economic Roots of Newton’s Principia. In this work, I try to show that Bukharin’s main achievement is a theory of science based on the concept of practice and at the same time present the internal coherence and the logical structure of Bukharin’s schema. Finally, I discuss what, in my opinion, is a drawback in Bukharin’s paper: his failure to discuss the possibility for scientific objectivity

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References found in this work

Prison Notebooks.Antonio Gramsci - 1971 - Columbia University Press.
The Social Function of Science.J. Bernal - 1940 - Philosophical Review 49:377.
Science and Civilization in China.Joseph Needham - 1958 - Science and Society 22 (1):74-77.
The Social Relations of Science.J. G. Crowther - 1941 - Science and Society 5 (4):392-393.
Marxism and the philosophy of science: a critical history.Helena Sheehan (ed.) - 1985 - Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press.

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