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Exploring Humans: an Introduction to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences

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Exploring Humans is a complete overview of the most important currents in the philosophy of science up to the 21st century. It is an outstanding introduction into the philosophy of science for students of sociology as well as economy.
The authors focus on the 'gamma'-sciences, such as economy, psychology and sociology. Thanks to their clear and accessable writing, attention to contemporary events, the abundance of examples and illustrations, this work is also a fine vademecum for professional philosophers, students of philosophy and scientists in general.
Exploring Humans contains 3 parts: 'Philosophy of Knowledge’, ‘Philosophy of Science’ and ‘New perspectives’. The authors have attempted to present an impartial overview of the history of the philosophy of science. Each chapter is concluded with a short summary, a brief discussion of the literature and references.

528 pages, Paperback

First published August 1, 2007

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127 people want to read

About the author

Hans Dooremalen

8 books2 followers
Herman de Regt en Hans Dooremalen zijn als wetenschapsfilosofen verbonden aan Tilburg University. Ze schreven onder meer het wetenschapsfilosofisch handboek Exploring Humans en Het snapgevoel. Hoe de illusie van begrip ons denken gijzelt, dat een vervolg is op Wat een onzin!

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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
46 reviews
September 20, 2021
Dit boek is een uitgebreide introductie in de geschiedenis van epistemologie en philosophy of science. Het begint vanzelfsprekend bij Socrates, Plato en Aristoteles en legt heel duidelijk de rationele en empirische stroming uit vervolgens bespreekt het vrijwel alle grote filosofen die over dit onderwerp hebben geschreven zoals Descartes, Hume en Kant. Het eindigt met de twintigste eeuw en de demarcatiediscussie tussen o.a. Popper, Kuhn en Lakatos.

Dit boek heb ik moeten lezen voor mijn studie filosofie, maar raad het iedereen aan die geïnteresseerd is in dit onderwerp. Het is toegankelijk geschreven en gebruikt veel duidelijke voorbeelden om ingewikkelde kwesties te duiden. Hierdoor heb ik in korte tijd zo onvoorstelbaar veel informatie opgenomen en begrepen.

Profile Image for Kyrill .
121 reviews6 followers
June 18, 2024
Pretty decent, latter half of the book was not that interesting to me so half assed it but the first part was written really clearly and inspired me to read philosophy from the enlightenment
Profile Image for Lenka.
37 reviews
July 16, 2012
Had to read this book for a "Thinking about Science" course at the Universiteit van Tilburg - one of the authors was our lecturer!
I really dislike philosophy, it's my least favorite subject ever. I have to admit though that this book is so well written that even I could somehow enjoy reading it!
I would definitely recommend this one to anyone who is interested in Philosophy and would like to have a book that nicely summarizes everything you need to know, in details!
Profile Image for John.
69 reviews
November 26, 2015
Read like a Game of Thrones in Philosophy of Science. It provides a clear and insightful overview in the continuum of scientific progress and thought about science and knowledge from Plato and Aristotle to the modern day. The book has good further reading tips, provides examples and cases and also short biographies of relevant philosophers.
I read it as part of a Philosophy of Science course given by one of the book's authors.
Profile Image for Chimène Gommans.
6 reviews
October 12, 2022
I had to read this for my philosophy of science course at the UvA, and whereas it seemed as such a big book at first, I must say I enjoyed it. Clear definitions, good and plenty of examples, suggestions for further reading, clear index. It was a lot, but in the end I'm happy I bought the book and finished it (:
Profile Image for Bram Medelli.
69 reviews3 followers
August 8, 2020
This book explains a history of epistemology very clearly and can be read by academic and casually interested philosophers alike! It helped me to put many thinkers within context and introduced new ones to me too.
Profile Image for Geert Bremmer.
159 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2021
Ik vind het bijna knap hoor de auteurs deze droge stof nog droger weten te maken. Het boek staat daarbij vol irrelevante informatie. Door het verhalend proberen te schrijven ontbreekt de structuur die een studieboek ook zou moeten hebben. Zodra er een definitie gegeven moet worden, wordt een citaat gebruikt, die voor mij niet altijd even duidelijk zijn.
Profile Image for Reti.
207 reviews
December 3, 2021
I normally would not add books I read for school but I read this entire brick of a book and it was a struggle so I'm counting it

Ily Karl Popper!
Profile Image for Michiel.
825 reviews
December 23, 2021
Super interesting. Hard to read, a study book. But useful if you want to know more on what science is.
8 reviews
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February 9, 2025
that was a brick that i would read anyways, therefore it belongs on my goodreads.
it made me lose my shit quite a few times
Profile Image for Lex Krishnadath.
12 reviews
January 26, 2021
This book is remarkably concise for a book on philosophy. In addition, the narrative makes you read this book as if it were fiction. I love the short biographies of each discussed philosopher.
Profile Image for Margaret.
20 reviews12 followers
November 30, 2013
Very clear and easy to understand. I can definitely recommend this if you want to have some basic knowledge of the history of philosophy of science until now.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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