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Forms of presentism in the history of science. Rethinking the project of historical epistemology
Authors:Laurent Loison
Institution:IHPST, UMR 8590, CNRS, Paris-1 University, Paris, France;Tilburg Center for Logic, Ethics, and Philosophy of Science, Tilburg University, PO Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands;Department of Philosophy, 513 Agnes Arnold Hall, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA;Department of Philosophy, University of California-Santa Cruz, 1156 High St, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA;Unit for the History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia;Faculty of History, University of Oxford, George Street, Oxford OX1 2RL, United Kingdom;Laval Université, Philosophie, Pavillon Félix-Antoine-Savard, 2325, rue des Bibliothèques, Université Laval, Québec QC G1V 0A6, Canada
Abstract:Since the late 1980s, presentism has seen a resurgence among some historians of science. Most of them draw a line between a good form of presentism and typical anachronism, but where the line should be drawn remains an open question. The present article aims at resolving this problem. In the first part I define the four main distinct forms of presentism at work in the history of science and the different purposes they serve. Based on this typology, the second part reconsiders what counts as anachronism, Whiggism and positivist history. This clarification is used as a basis to rethink the research program of historical epistemology in the third section. Throughout this article, I examine the conceptual core of historical epistemology more than its actual history, from Bachelard to Foucault or others. Its project should be defined – as Canguilhem suggested – as an attempt to account for both the contingency and the rationality of science. As such, historical epistemology is based on a complex fifth form of presentism, which I call critical presentism. The critical relation at stake not only works from the present to the past, because of the acknowledged rationality of science, but also from the past to the present because of the contingency and historicity of scientific knowledge.
Keywords:Presentism  Whiggism  Historical epistemology  Georges Canguilhem
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