Edge and universalism vs. particularism

Elisabeth Leiss e.leiss at GERMANISTIK.UNI-MUENCHEN.DE
Tue Mar 11 11:55:22 UTC 2014


Nonsense as usual!

Am 10.03.2014 23:01, schrieb Everett, Daniel:
> The quaint concept that science is “the pursuit of truth” is a hangover from the Calvinistic and Lutheran roots of the Enlightenment.
>
> It is a historical oddity. Some do seem to believe it however.
>
> I will be debating Nancy Cartwright and George Ellis on a related matter, is there anything we might call “independent evidence” in support of this or that at the How the Light Gets In Festival at Hay on Wye in May. http://howthelightgetsin.iai.tv
>
> At that same conference I will be debating a couple of anthropologists on what hunter-gatherers have to teach us about our evolutionary roots (my answer is "pretty much nothing").
>
> Dan
>
> On Mar 10, 2014, at 4:31 PM, Matthew Dryer <dryer at BUFFALO.EDU> wrote:
>
>> The idea that the search for diversity is somehow less scientific than the search for similarity is nonsense.  Science is the pursuit of truth, whether that truth involves diversity or similarity.
>> Matthew
>> _______________________
>>
>> Matthew Dryer, Professor
>> Department of Linguistics

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