Abstract
The year 2012 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the original publication of Thomas Kuhn’s
famous book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Kuhn, who taught at Berkeley,
Princeton and MIT following studies in physics at Harvard, was a historian of science
whose ideas have had a major impact on the philosophy of science. Now in its third edition,
Structure has had a lasting influence on our thinking about science. After fifty years,
Kuhn’s ideas show signs of wear. But they continue to shape our “image of science”, to
echo Kuhn’s own turn of phrase in the opening lines of Structure.
The core idea of Structure is that scientific research is based on underlying
theoretical structures which provide a framework for research in a field for a sustained
period of time. Kuhn’s name for these structures was paradigm. It is Kuhn’s use of the
word that inserted ‘paradigm’ into the popular lexicon. His original use of the word was
flexible. But he had two key points in mind. First, there is a set of beliefs about a domain
of study, including generalizations and a model of how the domain is constituted, that is
adopted as the basis for scientific practice in a scientific field at a time. Second, there are
a number of important examples of exemplary scientific research which later scientists look
back to as guiding inspiration for their own research. Examples include Copernican
heliocentric astronomy, Lavoisier’s oxygen-based chemistry and Darwin’s theory of
evolution by natural selection. All of these constituted paradigms for scientists working in
these areas for a significant period of time, both in the sense of providing an overarching
set of beliefs about the world and in the sense of providing examples of exemplary research.