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Alexandre Koyré
(29 Aug 1892 - 28 Apr 1964)
Russian-French philosopher and science historian.
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Science Quotes by Alexandre Koyré (2)
It is possible that the deepest meaning and aim of Newtonianism, or rather, of the whole scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, of which Newton is the heir and the highest expression, is just to abolish the world of the 'more or less', the world of qualities and sense perception, the world of appreciation of our daily life, and to replace it by the (Archimedean) universe of precision, of exact measures, of strict determination ... This revolution [is] one of the deepest, if not the deepest, mutations and transformations accomplished—or suffered—by the human mind since the invention of the cosmos by the Greeks, two thousand years before.
— Alexandre Koyré
'The Significance of the Newtonian Synthesis' (1950). In Newtonian Studies (1965), 4-5.
See also: | Aristotle (86) | Measurement (68) | Sir Isaac Newton (131) | Scientific Revolution (7) | Transformation (5)
What the founders of modern science, among them Galileo, had to do, was not to criticize and to combat certain faulty theories, and to correct or to replace them by better ones. They had to do something quite different. They had to destroy one world and to replace it by another. They had to reshape the framework of our intellect itself, to restate and to reform its concepts, to evolve a new approach to Being, a new concept of knowledge, a new concept of science—and even to replace a pretty natural approach, that of common sense, by another which is not natural at all.
— Alexandre Koyré
Galileo and Plato (1943), 405.
See also: | Common Sense (18) | Concept (15) | Founder (3) | Galileo Galilei (56) | Knowledge (341) | Scientific Revolution (7) | Theory (192)