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Gaston Bachelard

Gaston Bachelard (/bæʃəˈlɑːr/; French: [baʃlaʁ]; 27 June 1884 – 16 October 1962) was a French philosopher.[11] He made contributions in the fields of poetics and the philosophy of science. To the latter, he introduced the concepts of epistemological obstacle and epistemological break (obstacle épistémologique and rupture épistémologique). He influenced many subsequent French philosophers, among them Michel Foucault, Louis Althusser, Dominique Lecourt and Jacques Derrida, as well as the sociologists Pierre Bourdieu and Bruno Latour.[12]

Gaston Bachelard
Born(1884-06-27)27 June 1884
Bar-sur-Aube, France
Died16 October 1962(1962-10-16) (aged 78)
Paris, France
EducationUniversity of Paris
(B.A., 1920;[1] D.-ès-Lettres, 1927)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy[2]
French historical epistemology[3]
InstitutionsUniversity of Dijon[4]
University of Paris
Doctoral advisorAbel Rey
Léon Brunschvicg
Main interests
Historical epistemology
constructivist epistemology, history and philosophy of science, philosophy of art, phenomenology, psychoanalysis, literary theory, education
Notable ideas
Epistemological break, the poetics of space, rational materialism, technoscience
(techno-science)[5][6]
Signature

For Bachelard, the scientific object should be constructed and therefore different from the positivist sciences; in other words, information is in continuous construction. Empiricism and rationalism are not regarded as dualism or opposition but complementary, therefore studies of a priori and a posteriori, or in other words reason and dialectic, are part of scientific research.[13]

Life and work

 
Facade painted in homage to Gaston Bachelard, in Bar-sur-Aube, his birthplace.

Bachelard was a postal clerk in Bar-sur-Aube, and then studied physics and chemistry before finally becoming interested in philosophy. To obtain his doctorate (doctorat ès lettres) in 1927, he wrote two theses: the main one, Essai sur la connaissance approchée, under the direction of Abel Rey, and the complementary one, Étude sur l'évolution d'un problème de physique : la propagation thermique dans les solides, supervised by Léon Brunschvicg.

He first taught from 1902 to 1903 at the college of Sézanne, but turned away from teaching to consider a career in telegraphy. Literary by training, he took the technological path before moving towards science and mathematics. In particular, he was fascinated by the great discoveries of the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century (radioactivity, quantum and wave mechanics, relativity, electromagnetism and wireless telegraphy).[14]

He was a professor at the University of Dijon from 1930 to 1940 and then was appointed chair in the history and philosophy of science at the University of Paris. In 1958, he became a member of the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium.[15]

Bachelard's psychology of science

Bachelard's studies of the history and philosophy of science in such works as Le nouvel esprit scientifique ("The New Scientific Spirit", 1934) and La formation de l'esprit scientifique ("The Formation of the Scientific Mind", 1938) were based on his vision of historical epistemology as a kind of psychoanalysis of the scientific mind.

In the English-speaking world, the connection Bachelard made between psychology and the history of science has been little understood.[citation needed] Bachelard demonstrated how the progress of science could be blocked by certain types of mental patterns, creating the concept of obstacle épistémologique ("epistemological obstacle"). One task of epistemology is to make clear the mental patterns at use in science, in order to help scientists overcome the obstacles to knowledge. Another goal is to “give back to human reason its function of agitation and aggressiveness” as Bachelard put it in ‘L'engagement rationaliste’ (1972).[16]

Epistemological breaks: the discontinuity of scientific progress

Bachelard was critical of Auguste Comte's positivism, which considered science as a continual progress. To Bachelard, scientific developments such as Einstein's theory of relativity demonstrated the discontinuous nature of the history of sciences. Thus models that framed scientific development as continuous, such as that of Comte and Émile Meyerson, seemed simplistic and erroneous to Bachelard.

Through his concept of "epistemological break", Bachelard underlined the discontinuity at work in the history of sciences. However the term "epistemological break" itself is almost never used by Bachelard but became famous through Louis Althusser.

He showed that new theories integrated old theories in new paradigms, changing the sense of concepts (for instance, the concept of mass, used by Newton and Einstein in two different senses). Thus, non-Euclidean geometry did not contradict Euclidean geometry, but integrated it into a larger framework.

Teacher and philosopher

Discharged in March 1919 and unemployed, Bachelard searched and obtained a job in October as a professor of physics and chemistry at the college of Bar-sur-Aube. His wife, Jeanne Rossi, a schoolteacher he had married in 1914, was transferred to Voigny. His daughter Suzanne was born on 18 October. He travelled the six kilometers to Bar-sur-Aube on foot every day, was provided a very useful education, and enrolled for a philosophy degree. Jeanne died in June 1920, and Bachelard raised his daughter alone.[17] At the age of thirty-six he began a completely unexpected philosophical career. Starting decisively in 1922, he acquired the title of Doctor of Letters at the Sorbonne in 1927. His theses, supported by Abel Rey and Léon Brunschvicg, were published.[18] He became a lecturer at the Faculty of Letters of Dijon from October 1927, but remained at the college of Bar-sur-Aube until 1930. He even participated in the municipal elections of 1929 to defend the project of a college for all.[19] He nevertheless accepted a professorship at the University of Burgundy when his daughter Suzanne entered the second degree.

He did the same when he was appointed to the Sorbonne as a university professor and director of the Institute for the History of Science and Technology in 1940, accompanying his daughter in her higher educations.[20]

On 25 August 1937 he was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor. He became a professor at the Sorbonne from 1940 to 1954. He held the chair of the history and philosophy of science, where he succeeded Abel Rey, director of the Institute of History and Philosophy of Science and Technology (IHST), which in 1992 became IHPST.[21][12]

The role of epistemology in science

 
The building in rue de la Xavée in Remiremont, where Bachelard lived from 1903 to 1905.

Bachelard was a rationalist in the Cartesian sense, although he recommended his "non-Cartesian epistemology" as a replacement for the more standard Cartesian epistemology.[22] He compared "scientific knowledge" to ordinary knowledge in the way we deal with it, and saw error as only illusion: "Scientifically, one thinks truth as the historical rectification of a persistent error, and experiments as correctives for an initial, common illusion (illusion première)."[23]

The role of epistemology is to show the history of the (scientific) production of concepts. Those concepts are not just theoretical propositions: they are simultaneously abstract and concrete, pervading technical and pedagogical activity. This explains why "The electric bulb is an object of scientific thought… an example of an abstract-concrete object."[24] To understand the way it works, one has to take the detour of scientific knowledge. Epistemology is thus not a general philosophy that aims at justifying scientific reasoning. Instead, it produces regional histories of science.

Shifts in scientific perspective

Bachelard never saw how seemingly irrational theories often simply represented a drastic shift in scientific perspective. For instance, he never claimed that the theory of probabilities was just another way of complexifying reality through a deepening of rationality (even though critics like Lord Kelvin found this theory irrational).[25]

One of his main theses in The New Scientific Mind was that modern sciences had replaced the classical ontology of the substance with an "ontology of relations", which could be assimilated to something like a process philosophy. For instance, the physical concepts of matter and rays correspond, according to him, to the metaphysical concepts of the thing and of movement; but whereas classical philosophy considered both as distinct, and the thing as ontologically real, modern science can not distinguish matter from rays. It is thus impossible to examine an immobile thing, which was precisely the condition for knowledge according to the classical theory of knowledge (Becoming being impossible to be known, in accordance with Aristotle and Plato's theories of knowledge).

In non-Cartesian epistemology, there is no "simple substance" as in Cartesianism, but only complex objects built by theories and experiments and continuously improved (VI, 4). Intuition is therefore not primitive, but built (VI, 2). These themes led Bachelard to support a sort of constructivist epistemology.

Other academic interests

In addition to epistemology, Bachelard's work deals with many other topics, including poetry, dreams, psychoanalysis, and the imagination. The Psychoanalysis of Fire (1938) and The Poetics of Space (1958) are among the most popular of his works: Jean-Paul Sartre cites the former and Bachelard's Water and Dreams in his Being and Nothingness (1943), and the latter had a wide reception in architectural theory circles, and continues to be influential in literary theory and creative writing. In philosophy, this nocturnal side of his work is developed by his student Gilbert Durand.

Philosopher and citizen

Feminist philosopher

It should be noted, in his singular career, the concern which he had to ensure the development of his daughter, so much the time was marked by the cleavage of the sexes and the functions.[26] Going against sexist stereotypes, he wanted to make his daughter a scholar. Suzanne would be a mathematician and philosopher and would be able to develop phenomenological and epistemological research of high standing.[27]

Bibliography

His works include:

  • Essai sur la connaissance approchée (1928)
  • Étude sur l'évolution d'un problème de physique: la propagation thermique dans les solides (1928)
  • La valeur inductive de la relativité (1929)
  • La pluralisme cohérent de la chimie moderne (1932)
  • L'Intuition de l'instant (1932)
  • Les intuitions atomistiques: essai de classification (1933)
  • Le nouvel esprit scientifique (1934)
  • La dialectique de la durée (1936)
  • L'expérience de l'espace dans la physique contemporaine (1937)
  • La formation de l'esprit scientifique: contribution à une psychanalyse de la connaissance objective (1938)
  • La psychanalyse du feu (1938) (The Psychoanalysis of Fire, 1964)
  • La philosophie du non: essai d'une philosophie du nouvel esprit scientifique (1940), publisher Pellicanolibri, 1978
  • L'eau et les rêves (1942) (Water and Dreams, 1983)
  • L'air et les songes (1943) (Air and Dreams, 1988)
  • La terre et les rêveries de la volonté (1948) (Earth and Reveries of Will, 2002)
  • La terre et les rêveries du repos (1948) (Earth and Reveries of Repose, 2011)
  • Le Rationalisme appliqué (1949)
  • L'activité rationaliste de la physique contemporaine (1951)
  • Le matérialisme rationnel (1953)
  • La poétique de l'espace (1957) (The Poetics of Space, 1969 and 2014)
  • La poétique de la rêverie (1960) (The Poetics of Reverie: Childhood, Language, and the Cosmos, 1969)
  • La flamme d'une chandelle (1961)
  • L'engagement rationaliste (1972)

English translations

Though most of Bachelard's major works on poetics have been translated into English, only about half of his works on the philosophy of science have been translated.

  • The Philosophy of No: A Philosophy of the New Scientific Mind. Orion Press, New York, 1968. Translation by G.C. Waterston. (La philosophie du non)
  • The New Scientific Spirit. Beacon Press, Boston, 1985. Translation by A. Goldhammer. (Le nouvel esprit scientifique)
  • Dialectic of Duration. Clinamen, Bolton, 2000. Translation by M. McAllester Jones. (La dialectique de la durée)
  • The Formation of the Scientific Mind. Clinamen, Bolton, 2002. Translation by M. McAllester Jones. (La formation de l'esprit scientifique)
  • Intuition of the Instant. Northwestern University Press, 2013. Translation by Eileen Rizo-Patron (L'intuition de l'instant)
  • Atomistic Intuitions. State University of New York Press, 2018. Translation by Roch C. Smith (Intuitions atomistiques)

See also

References

  1. ^ Chimisso, Cristina (2013) Gaston Bachelard: Critic of Science and the Imagination. Routledge. p. 51. ISBN 9781136453885
  2. ^ Mullarkey, John and Lord, Beth eds. (2009). The Continuum Companion to Continental Philosophy. London: Continuum. p. 211. ISBN 0826498302
  3. ^ Reck, E. ed. (2016) The Historical Turn in Analytic Philosophy. Springer. Ch. 2.1. ISBN 978-0230201538
  4. ^ Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1998): "Bachelard, Gaston (1884-1962)".
  5. ^ A term for the combination of technology and science as disciplines coined in 1953 by Bachelard; see: Bachelard, Gaston (1953) La materialisme rationel. Paris: PUF
  6. ^ Ihde, Don (1999) Expanding Hermeneutics: Visualism in Science, Northwestern University Press. p. 8. ISBN 0810116065
  7. ^ Dauben, Joseph W. and Scriba, Christoph J. eds. (2002) Writing the History of Mathematics – Its Historical Development. Birkhaeuser. p. 33. ISBN 978-3764361662
  8. ^ Rizo-Patron, Eileen; Casey, Edward S. and Wirth, Jason M. eds. (2017) Adventures in Phenomenology: Gaston Bachelard, SUNY Press. p. 123 n. 11. ISBN 9781438466057
  9. ^ Dosse, François (2014). Castoriadis. Une vie. Paris: La Découverte. pp. 43–4.
  10. ^ Serres, M. (1970) "La réforme et les sept péchés," L'Arc, 42, Bachelard special issue.
  11. ^ Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Philosophers. London: Routledge. 1996. pp. 41–42. ISBN 0-415-06043-5.
  12. ^ a b Simons, Massimiliano; Rutgeerts, Jonas; Masschelein, Anneleen and Cortois, Paul (2019). "Gaston Bachelard and Contemporary Philosophy" (PDF). Parrhesia. 31: 1–16.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Lima, Marcos Antonio Martins; Marinelli, Marcos (13 July 2011). "A epistemologia de Gaston Bachelard: uma ruptura com as filosofias do imobilismo". Revista de Ciências Humanas. 45 (2). doi:10.5007/2178-4582.2011v45n2p393.
  14. ^ Gaston Bachelard. babelio.com
  15. ^ Alain, Dierkens (1987) Index biographique des membres, correspondants et associés de 1769 à 1984. Académie Royale de Belgique. p. 19.
  16. ^ Grange, Juliette (2015). "L'invention technique et théorique : la philosophie des sciences de G. Bachelard". HAL-SHS- Archives ouvertes. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  17. ^ Jean-Michel Wavelet, Gaston Bachelard, l'inattendu, op. cit., p. 120 et Daniel Giroux, Gaston Bachelard, travailleur solitaire, op. cit., p. 55.
  18. ^ Étude sur l'évolution d'un problème de physique : la propagation thermique dans les solides
  19. ^ Kaplan, Edward K. (1972). "Gaston Bachelard's Philosophy of Imagination: An Introduction". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. 33 (1): 1–24. doi:10.2307/2106717. JSTOR 2106717.
  20. ^ Chimisso, Cristina (2013) Gaston Bachelard: Critic of Science and the Imagination. Routledge. p. 133. ISBN 9781136453885
  21. ^ Tiles, Mary (2016). "Bachelard, Gaston (1884–1962)". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780415249126-dd007-1. ISBN 9780415250696.
  22. ^ The New Scientific Mind, conclusion.
  23. ^ The New Scientific Mind, VI, 6.
  24. ^ in Le Rationalisme appliqué (1949, 2nd ed. of 1962, p. 104ff).
  25. ^ The New Scientific Mind, V (p. 120 French ed., 1934).
  26. ^ Wavelet, Jean-Michel (2019). Gaston Bachelard, l'inattendu : les chemins d'une volonté (in French). Paris. ISBN 978-2-343-18246-9. OCLC 1127647176.
  27. ^ Gaston Bachelard: biography, activities, main ideas. public-welfare.com

Sources

  • Dominique Lecourt, L’épistémologie historique de Gaston Bachelard (1969). Vrin, Paris, 11e édition augmentée, 2002.
  • Dominique Lecourt, Pour une critique de l’épistémologie : Bachelard, Canguilhem, Foucault (1972, réed. Maspero, Paris, 5e éd. 1980).
  • D. Lecourt, Marxism and Epistemology: Bachelard, Canguilhem and Foucault, New Left Books, London (1975).
  • Dominique Lecourt, Bachelard, Epistémologie, textes choisis (1971). PUF, Paris, 6e édition, 1996.
  • Dominique Lecourt, Bachelard, le jour et la nuit, Grasset, Paris, 1974.
  • Didier Gil, Bachelard et la culture scientifique, Presses Universitaires de France, 1993.
  • Didier Gil, Autour de Bachelard – esprit et matière, un siècle français de philosophie des sciences (1867–1962), Les Belles Lettres, Encre marine, 2010.
  • Hommage à Gaston Bachelard. Etudes de philosophie et d'histoire des sciences, by C. Bouligand, G. Canguilhem, P. Costabel, F. Courtes, François Dagognet, M. Daumas, Gilles Granger, J. Hyppolite, R. Martin, R. Poirier and R. Taton
  • Actes du Colloque sur Bachelard de 1970 (Colloque de Cerisy).
  • L'imaginaire du concept: Bachelard, une épistémologie de la pureté by Françoise Gaillard, MLN, Vol. 101, No. 4, French Issue (Sep 1986), pp. 895–911.
  • Gaston Bachelard ou le rêve des origines, by Jean-Luc Pouliquen, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2007.

Further reading

  • Dagognet, F. (1970). "Bachelard, Gaston". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 365–366. ISBN 0-684-10114-9.
  • Smith, James L. (2012). "New Bachelards?: Reveries, Elements and Twenty-First Century Materialisms". Other Modernities: 156–167. doi:10.13130/2035-7680/2418.
  • McAllester Jones, Gaston Bachelard Subversive Humanist: Texts and Readings, University of Wisconsin Press, 1991.
  • Eileen Rizo-Patron, Edward S. Casey, and Jason Wirth, eds. Adventures in Phenomenology, Gaston Bachelard, State University of New York Press, 2017
  • Roch C. Smith, Gaston Bachelard, Philosopher of Science and Imagination, State University of New York Press, 2016
  • Mary Tiles, Bachelard: Science and Objectivity, Cambridge University Press, 1984

External links

  • Website of the Association of Friends of Gaston Bachelard (in French)
  • , Université de Bourgogne (in French)
  • Works of Bachelard on-line (in French)

gaston, bachelard, ɑːr, french, baʃlaʁ, june, 1884, october, 1962, french, philosopher, made, contributions, fields, poetics, philosophy, science, latter, introduced, concepts, epistemological, obstacle, epistemological, break, obstacle, épistémologique, ruptu. Gaston Bachelard b ae ʃ e ˈ l ɑːr French baʃlaʁ 27 June 1884 16 October 1962 was a French philosopher 11 He made contributions in the fields of poetics and the philosophy of science To the latter he introduced the concepts of epistemological obstacle and epistemological break obstacle epistemologique and rupture epistemologique He influenced many subsequent French philosophers among them Michel Foucault Louis Althusser Dominique Lecourt and Jacques Derrida as well as the sociologists Pierre Bourdieu and Bruno Latour 12 Gaston BachelardBorn 1884 06 27 27 June 1884Bar sur Aube FranceDied16 October 1962 1962 10 16 aged 78 Paris FranceEducationUniversity of Paris B A 1920 1 D es Lettres 1927 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophy 2 French historical epistemology 3 InstitutionsUniversity of Dijon 4 University of ParisDoctoral advisorAbel ReyLeon BrunschvicgMain interestsHistorical epistemologyconstructivist epistemology history and philosophy of science philosophy of art phenomenology psychoanalysis literary theory educationNotable ideasEpistemological break the poetics of space rational materialism technoscience techno science 5 6 Influences Charles Nodier Max Picard Emile Meyerson Auguste Comte Abel Rey Leon Brunschvicg 7 Carl Jung 8 Influenced Alexandre Koyre Georges Canguilhem Michel Foucault Louis Althusser Gilles Deleuze Pierre Bourdieu Maurice Merleau Ponty Dominique Lecourt Gilbert Durand Francois Dagognet Nader El Bizri Rogelio Salmona Don Ihde Cornelius Castoriadis 9 Michel Serres 10 Jules VuilleminSignatureFor Bachelard the scientific object should be constructed and therefore different from the positivist sciences in other words information is in continuous construction Empiricism and rationalism are not regarded as dualism or opposition but complementary therefore studies of a priori and a posteriori or in other words reason and dialectic are part of scientific research 13 Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Bachelard s psychology of science 1 2 Epistemological breaks the discontinuity of scientific progress 1 3 Teacher and philosopher 1 4 The role of epistemology in science 1 5 Shifts in scientific perspective 1 6 Other academic interests 2 Philosopher and citizen 2 1 Feminist philosopher 3 Bibliography 3 1 English translations 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and work Edit Facade painted in homage to Gaston Bachelard in Bar sur Aube his birthplace Bachelard was a postal clerk in Bar sur Aube and then studied physics and chemistry before finally becoming interested in philosophy To obtain his doctorate doctorat es lettres in 1927 he wrote two theses the main one Essai sur la connaissance approchee under the direction of Abel Rey and the complementary one Etude sur l evolution d un probleme de physique la propagation thermique dans les solides supervised by Leon Brunschvicg He first taught from 1902 to 1903 at the college of Sezanne but turned away from teaching to consider a career in telegraphy Literary by training he took the technological path before moving towards science and mathematics In particular he was fascinated by the great discoveries of the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century radioactivity quantum and wave mechanics relativity electromagnetism and wireless telegraphy 14 He was a professor at the University of Dijon from 1930 to 1940 and then was appointed chair in the history and philosophy of science at the University of Paris In 1958 he became a member of the Royal Academy of Science Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium 15 Bachelard s psychology of science Edit Bachelard s studies of the history and philosophy of science in such works as Le nouvel esprit scientifique The New Scientific Spirit 1934 and La formation de l esprit scientifique The Formation of the Scientific Mind 1938 were based on his vision of historical epistemology as a kind of psychoanalysis of the scientific mind In the English speaking world the connection Bachelard made between psychology and the history of science has been little understood citation needed Bachelard demonstrated how the progress of science could be blocked by certain types of mental patterns creating the concept of obstacle epistemologique epistemological obstacle One task of epistemology is to make clear the mental patterns at use in science in order to help scientists overcome the obstacles to knowledge Another goal is to give back to human reason its function of agitation and aggressiveness as Bachelard put it in L engagement rationaliste 1972 16 Epistemological breaks the discontinuity of scientific progress Edit Bachelard was critical of Auguste Comte s positivism which considered science as a continual progress To Bachelard scientific developments such as Einstein s theory of relativity demonstrated the discontinuous nature of the history of sciences Thus models that framed scientific development as continuous such as that of Comte and Emile Meyerson seemed simplistic and erroneous to Bachelard Through his concept of epistemological break Bachelard underlined the discontinuity at work in the history of sciences However the term epistemological break itself is almost never used by Bachelard but became famous through Louis Althusser He showed that new theories integrated old theories in new paradigms changing the sense of concepts for instance the concept of mass used by Newton and Einstein in two different senses Thus non Euclidean geometry did not contradict Euclidean geometry but integrated it into a larger framework Teacher and philosopher Edit Discharged in March 1919 and unemployed Bachelard searched and obtained a job in October as a professor of physics and chemistry at the college of Bar sur Aube His wife Jeanne Rossi a schoolteacher he had married in 1914 was transferred to Voigny His daughter Suzanne was born on 18 October He travelled the six kilometers to Bar sur Aube on foot every day was provided a very useful education and enrolled for a philosophy degree Jeanne died in June 1920 and Bachelard raised his daughter alone 17 At the age of thirty six he began a completely unexpected philosophical career Starting decisively in 1922 he acquired the title of Doctor of Letters at the Sorbonne in 1927 His theses supported by Abel Rey and Leon Brunschvicg were published 18 He became a lecturer at the Faculty of Letters of Dijon from October 1927 but remained at the college of Bar sur Aube until 1930 He even participated in the municipal elections of 1929 to defend the project of a college for all 19 He nevertheless accepted a professorship at the University of Burgundy when his daughter Suzanne entered the second degree He did the same when he was appointed to the Sorbonne as a university professor and director of the Institute for the History of Science and Technology in 1940 accompanying his daughter in her higher educations 20 On 25 August 1937 he was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor He became a professor at the Sorbonne from 1940 to 1954 He held the chair of the history and philosophy of science where he succeeded Abel Rey director of the Institute of History and Philosophy of Science and Technology IHST which in 1992 became IHPST 21 12 The role of epistemology in science Edit The building in rue de la Xavee in Remiremont where Bachelard lived from 1903 to 1905 Bachelard was a rationalist in the Cartesian sense although he recommended his non Cartesian epistemology as a replacement for the more standard Cartesian epistemology 22 He compared scientific knowledge to ordinary knowledge in the way we deal with it and saw error as only illusion Scientifically one thinks truth as the historical rectification of a persistent error and experiments as correctives for an initial common illusion illusion premiere 23 The role of epistemology is to show the history of the scientific production of concepts Those concepts are not just theoretical propositions they are simultaneously abstract and concrete pervading technical and pedagogical activity This explains why The electric bulb is an object of scientific thought an example of an abstract concrete object 24 To understand the way it works one has to take the detour of scientific knowledge Epistemology is thus not a general philosophy that aims at justifying scientific reasoning Instead it produces regional histories of science Shifts in scientific perspective Edit Bachelard never saw how seemingly irrational theories often simply represented a drastic shift in scientific perspective For instance he never claimed that the theory of probabilities was just another way of complexifying reality through a deepening of rationality even though critics like Lord Kelvin found this theory irrational 25 One of his main theses in The New Scientific Mind was that modern sciences had replaced the classical ontology of the substance with an ontology of relations which could be assimilated to something like a process philosophy For instance the physical concepts of matter and rays correspond according to him to the metaphysical concepts of the thing and of movement but whereas classical philosophy considered both as distinct and the thing as ontologically real modern science can not distinguish matter from rays It is thus impossible to examine an immobile thing which was precisely the condition for knowledge according to the classical theory of knowledge Becoming being impossible to be known in accordance with Aristotle and Plato s theories of knowledge In non Cartesian epistemology there is no simple substance as in Cartesianism but only complex objects built by theories and experiments and continuously improved VI 4 Intuition is therefore not primitive but built VI 2 These themes led Bachelard to support a sort of constructivist epistemology Other academic interests Edit In addition to epistemology Bachelard s work deals with many other topics including poetry dreams psychoanalysis and the imagination The Psychoanalysis of Fire 1938 and The Poetics of Space 1958 are among the most popular of his works Jean Paul Sartre cites the former and Bachelard s Water and Dreams in his Being and Nothingness 1943 and the latter had a wide reception in architectural theory circles and continues to be influential in literary theory and creative writing In philosophy this nocturnal side of his work is developed by his student Gilbert Durand Philosopher and citizen EditFeminist philosopher Edit It should be noted in his singular career the concern which he had to ensure the development of his daughter so much the time was marked by the cleavage of the sexes and the functions 26 Going against sexist stereotypes he wanted to make his daughter a scholar Suzanne would be a mathematician and philosopher and would be able to develop phenomenological and epistemological research of high standing 27 Bibliography EditHis works include Essai sur la connaissance approchee 1928 Etude sur l evolution d un probleme de physique la propagation thermique dans les solides 1928 La valeur inductive de la relativite 1929 La pluralisme coherent de la chimie moderne 1932 L Intuition de l instant 1932 Les intuitions atomistiques essai de classification 1933 Le nouvel esprit scientifique 1934 La dialectique de la duree 1936 L experience de l espace dans la physique contemporaine 1937 La formation de l esprit scientifique contribution a une psychanalyse de la connaissance objective 1938 La psychanalyse du feu 1938 The Psychoanalysis of Fire 1964 La philosophie du non essai d une philosophie du nouvel esprit scientifique 1940 publisher Pellicanolibri 1978 L eau et les reves 1942 Water and Dreams 1983 L air et les songes 1943 Air and Dreams 1988 La terre et les reveries de la volonte 1948 Earth and Reveries of Will 2002 La terre et les reveries du repos 1948 Earth and Reveries of Repose 2011 Le Rationalisme applique 1949 L activite rationaliste de la physique contemporaine 1951 Le materialisme rationnel 1953 La poetique de l espace 1957 The Poetics of Space 1969 and 2014 La poetique de la reverie 1960 The Poetics of Reverie Childhood Language and the Cosmos 1969 La flamme d une chandelle 1961 L engagement rationaliste 1972 English translations Edit Though most of Bachelard s major works on poetics have been translated into English only about half of his works on the philosophy of science have been translated The Philosophy of No A Philosophy of the New Scientific Mind Orion Press New York 1968 Translation by G C Waterston La philosophie du non The New Scientific Spirit Beacon Press Boston 1985 Translation by A Goldhammer Le nouvel esprit scientifique Dialectic of Duration Clinamen Bolton 2000 Translation by M McAllester Jones La dialectique de la duree The Formation of the Scientific Mind Clinamen Bolton 2002 Translation by M McAllester Jones La formation de l esprit scientifique Intuition of the Instant Northwestern University Press 2013 Translation by Eileen Rizo Patron L intuition de l instant Atomistic Intuitions State University of New York Press 2018 Translation by Roch C Smith Intuitions atomistiques See also EditConstructivist epistemology Epistemological psychology Ophelia complex Suzanne Bachelard Thomas S KuhnReferences Edit Chimisso Cristina 2013 Gaston Bachelard Critic of Science and the Imagination Routledge p 51 ISBN 9781136453885 Mullarkey John and Lord Beth eds 2009 The Continuum Companion to Continental Philosophy London Continuum p 211 ISBN 0826498302 Reck E ed 2016 The Historical Turn in Analytic Philosophy Springer Ch 2 1 ISBN 978 0230201538 Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1998 Bachelard Gaston 1884 1962 A term for the combination of technology and science as disciplines coined in 1953 by Bachelard see Bachelard Gaston 1953 La materialisme rationel Paris PUF Ihde Don 1999 Expanding Hermeneutics Visualism in Science Northwestern University Press p 8 ISBN 0810116065 Dauben Joseph W and Scriba Christoph J eds 2002 Writing the History of Mathematics Its Historical Development Birkhaeuser p 33 ISBN 978 3764361662 Rizo Patron Eileen Casey Edward S and Wirth Jason M eds 2017 Adventures in Phenomenology Gaston Bachelard SUNY Press p 123 n 11 ISBN 9781438466057 Dosse Francois 2014 Castoriadis Une vie Paris La Decouverte pp 43 4 Serres M 1970 La reforme et les sept peches L Arc 42 Bachelard special issue Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth Century Philosophers London Routledge 1996 pp 41 42 ISBN 0 415 06043 5 a b Simons Massimiliano Rutgeerts Jonas Masschelein Anneleen and Cortois Paul 2019 Gaston Bachelard and Contemporary Philosophy PDF Parrhesia 31 1 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lima Marcos Antonio Martins Marinelli Marcos 13 July 2011 A epistemologia de Gaston Bachelard uma ruptura com as filosofias do imobilismo Revista de Ciencias Humanas 45 2 doi 10 5007 2178 4582 2011v45n2p393 Gaston Bachelard babelio com Alain Dierkens 1987 Index biographique des membres correspondants et associes de 1769 a 1984 Academie Royale de Belgique p 19 Grange Juliette 2015 L invention technique et theorique la philosophie des sciences de G Bachelard HAL SHS Archives ouvertes Retrieved 3 May 2020 Jean Michel Wavelet Gaston Bachelard l inattendu op cit p 120 et Daniel Giroux Gaston Bachelard travailleur solitaire op cit p 55 Etude sur l evolution d un probleme de physique la propagation thermique dans les solides Kaplan Edward K 1972 Gaston Bachelard s Philosophy of Imagination An Introduction Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 33 1 1 24 doi 10 2307 2106717 JSTOR 2106717 Chimisso Cristina 2013 Gaston Bachelard Critic of Science and the Imagination Routledge p 133 ISBN 9781136453885 Tiles Mary 2016 Bachelard Gaston 1884 1962 Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780415249126 dd007 1 ISBN 9780415250696 The New Scientific Mind conclusion The New Scientific Mind VI 6 in Le Rationalisme applique 1949 2nd ed of 1962 p 104ff The New Scientific Mind V p 120 French ed 1934 Wavelet Jean Michel 2019 Gaston Bachelard l inattendu les chemins d une volonte in French Paris ISBN 978 2 343 18246 9 OCLC 1127647176 Gaston Bachelard biography activities main ideas public welfare comSources EditDominique Lecourt L epistemologie historique de Gaston Bachelard 1969 Vrin Paris 11e edition augmentee 2002 Dominique Lecourt Pour une critique de l epistemologie Bachelard Canguilhem Foucault 1972 reed Maspero Paris 5e ed 1980 D Lecourt Marxism and Epistemology Bachelard Canguilhem and Foucault New Left Books London 1975 Dominique Lecourt Bachelard Epistemologie textes choisis 1971 PUF Paris 6e edition 1996 Dominique Lecourt Bachelard le jour et la nuit Grasset Paris 1974 Didier Gil Bachelard et la culture scientifique Presses Universitaires de France 1993 Didier Gil Autour de Bachelard esprit et matiere un siecle francais de philosophie des sciences 1867 1962 Les Belles Lettres Encre marine 2010 Hommage a Gaston Bachelard Etudes de philosophie et d histoire des sciences by C Bouligand G Canguilhem P Costabel F Courtes Francois Dagognet M Daumas Gilles Granger J Hyppolite R Martin R Poirier and R Taton Actes du Colloque sur Bachelard de 1970 Colloque de Cerisy L imaginaire du concept Bachelard une epistemologie de la purete by Francoise Gaillard MLN Vol 101 No 4 French Issue Sep 1986 pp 895 911 Gaston Bachelard ou le reve des origines by Jean Luc Pouliquen L Harmattan Paris 2007 Further reading EditDagognet F 1970 Bachelard Gaston Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 1 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 365 366 ISBN 0 684 10114 9 Smith James L 2012 New Bachelards Reveries Elements and Twenty First Century Materialisms Other Modernities 156 167 doi 10 13130 2035 7680 2418 McAllester Jones Gaston Bachelard Subversive Humanist Texts and Readings University of Wisconsin Press 1991 Eileen Rizo Patron Edward S Casey and Jason Wirth eds Adventures in Phenomenology Gaston Bachelard State University of New York Press 2017 Roch C Smith Gaston Bachelard Philosopher of Science and Imagination State University of New York Press 2016 Mary Tiles Bachelard Science and Objectivity Cambridge University Press 1984External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gaston Bachelard Wikiquote has quotations related to Gaston Bachelard Website of the Association of Friends of Gaston Bachelard in French Centre Gaston Bachelard de Recherche sur l Imaginaire et la Rationalite Universite de Bourgogne in French Works of Bachelard on line in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaston Bachelard amp oldid 1142082719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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