Description

Book Synopsis

In 1931, Soviet philosopher Boris Hessen presented a groundbreaking paper at the 2nd International Congress of the History of Science & Technology in London. Hessen made the radical claim that Sir Isaac Newton’s natural philosophy was traceable to the conditions of socioeconomic development and technological progress in 17th-century England. This revelation would alter the study of the history and philosophy of science for good.

No more than five years later, Hessen was dead; executed in what would become Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge. If not for the works of select scholars, Hessen’s legacy would have been lost to time. Nearly a century after Hessen’s death, we still know very little about this pioneering figure. In this book, Sean Winkler provides an exegesis of Hessen’s writings, articulating his unique understanding of the relationship between socioeconomic development, technological progress and natural scientific theory, re-assessing his legacy to the history and philosophy of science and reflecting on his enduring significance in today’s world of growing social inequality amidst unfettered technological progress



Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Practice and Ideology

2. Idealism and Materialism

3. Modern Physics

4. A Pantheon of Great Ideas

Conclusion

Postscript: Boris Hessen’s Entries to the Soviet Encyclopedia

Appendix 1 – “Space,” B.M. Hessen

Appendix 2 – “Ether,” B.M. Hessen

Appendix 3 – “Energy,” B.M. Hessen

Appendix 4 – “Entropy,” B.M. Hessen

Appendix 5 – “The Ergodic Hypothesis,” B.M. Hessen

Appendix 6 – “Einstein” H.M. Müntz and B.M. Hessen

Bibliography

Index

Boris Hessen and Philosophy: The Socioeconomic

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 01/12/2022
      ISBN13: 9781538147580, 978-1538147580
      ISBN10: 1538147580

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In 1931, Soviet philosopher Boris Hessen presented a groundbreaking paper at the 2nd International Congress of the History of Science & Technology in London. Hessen made the radical claim that Sir Isaac Newton’s natural philosophy was traceable to the conditions of socioeconomic development and technological progress in 17th-century England. This revelation would alter the study of the history and philosophy of science for good.

      No more than five years later, Hessen was dead; executed in what would become Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge. If not for the works of select scholars, Hessen’s legacy would have been lost to time. Nearly a century after Hessen’s death, we still know very little about this pioneering figure. In this book, Sean Winkler provides an exegesis of Hessen’s writings, articulating his unique understanding of the relationship between socioeconomic development, technological progress and natural scientific theory, re-assessing his legacy to the history and philosophy of science and reflecting on his enduring significance in today’s world of growing social inequality amidst unfettered technological progress



      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      1. Practice and Ideology

      2. Idealism and Materialism

      3. Modern Physics

      4. A Pantheon of Great Ideas

      Conclusion

      Postscript: Boris Hessen’s Entries to the Soviet Encyclopedia

      Appendix 1 – “Space,” B.M. Hessen

      Appendix 2 – “Ether,” B.M. Hessen

      Appendix 3 – “Energy,” B.M. Hessen

      Appendix 4 – “Entropy,” B.M. Hessen

      Appendix 5 – “The Ergodic Hypothesis,” B.M. Hessen

      Appendix 6 – “Einstein” H.M. Müntz and B.M. Hessen

      Bibliography

      Index

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