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Well-Ordered Science and Indian Epistemic Cultures

Ganeri, Jonardon

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Authors

Jonardon Ganeri



Abstract

This essay defends the view that “modern science,” as with modernity in general, is a polycentered phenomenon, something that appears in different forms at different times and places. It begins with two ideas about the nature of rational scientific inquiry: Karin Knorr Cetina's idea of “epistemic cultures,” and Philip Kitcher's idea of science as “a system of public knowledge,” such knowledge as would be deemed worthwhile by an ideal conversation among the whole public under conditions of mutual engagement. This account of the nature of scientific practice provides us with a new perspective from which to understand key elements in the philosophical project of Jaina logicians in the seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries c.e. Jaina theory seems exceptionally well targeted onto two of the key constituents in the ideal conversation—the classification of all human points of view and the representation of end states of the deliberative process. The Buddhist theory of the Kathāvatthu contributes to Indian epistemic culture in a different way: by supplying a detailed theory of how human dialogical standpoints can be revised in the ideal conversation, an account of the phenomenon Kitcher labels “tutoring.” Thus science in India has its own history, one that should be studied in comparison and contrast with the history of science in Europe. In answer to Joseph Needham, it was not ‘modern science’ which failed to develop in India or China but rather non-well-ordered science, science as unconstrained by social value and democratic consent. What I argue is that this is not a deficit in the civilisational histories of these countries, but a virtue.

Citation

Ganeri, J. (2013). Well-Ordered Science and Indian Epistemic Cultures. Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society, 104(2), 348-359. https://doi.org/10.1086/670953

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Apr 1, 2013
Deposit Date Oct 21, 2013
Publicly Available Date Sep 17, 2019
Print ISSN 0021-1753
Electronic ISSN 1545-6994
Publisher The University of Chicago Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 104
Issue 2
Pages 348-359
DOI https://doi.org/10.1086/670953
Publisher URL http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/670953

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Copyright Statement
©2013 by The History of Science Society. This is the published version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher’s terms and conditions.





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