Titre | Articles | Auteurs |
---|---|---|
Logique et Interaction : vers une Géométrie de la Cognition | 14 | Jean-Yves Heurtebise, Albert Burroni, Antonio Mosca, Sébastien Poinat, Franck Varenne , Roberto Finelli, Pierre Livet, Jean Lassègue, Giuseppe Longo, Simona Ronchi Della Rocca, Thierry Paul. |
De l’oeil au regard | 4 | Julie Alev Dilmaç, Sabine Dizel Perret, Elisa Baitelli, Véronique Mérieux. |
Le chercheur face aux émotions | 9 | Véronique Dassié, Manon Istasse, Virginie Valentin, Nasser Tafferant, Thierry Berquière, Dolores Martin-Moruno, Patrick Laviolette, Sepideh Parsapajouh, Céline Verguet. |
Jeunesse et appropriation de l’espace public | 9 | Claire Calogirou, Sofiane Ailane, Florian Lebreton, Christophe Gibout, Yves Pedrazzini, Sylvain Cubizolles, Virginie Grandhomme, Sophie Valiergue. |
The analysis of concepts, conducted on a comparative level if possible, as well as the (tentative) explanation of the philosophical project, should always accompany scientific work. In fact, critical reflections regarding existing theories are at the core of positive scientific constructions, because science is often constructed against the supposed tyranny and autonomy of « facts » which in reality are nothing but « small-scale theories ». Science is also often constructed by means of an audacious interpretation of « new » (and old) facts ; it progresses against the obvious and against common sense (le « bon sens ») ; it struggles against the illusions of immediate knowledge and must be capable of escaping from already established theoretical
frameworks. For example, the very high level of mathematical technicity in the geometry of Ptolemaic epicycles constructed from clearly observable facts strongly perplexed numerous Renaissance thinkers such as Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo… : in order to account for the movements of the stars and for the « obvious » immobility of the earth, circles that were added to circles, centers of new circles, were established with and extraordinary geometrical finesse and gave way to uncountably many « publications » (of very high Impact Factor, at least till the middle of the XVII century). Yet they
failed to convince the aforementioned revolutionary critical thinkers. And, as Bachelard rightly puts it, the construction of knowledge was then founded, as was Greek thought, upon an epistemological severance, which operates a separation with the previous ways of thinking.
But it is recent examples that interest us, where the critical view finds expression on a more punctual basis, by means of « negative results ». Let’s explain.
When Poincaré was working on the calculi of astronomers, on the dynamics of planets within their gravitational fields, he produced, by purely mathematical...