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Anaximander en de geboorte van het…
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Anaximander en de geboorte van het wetenschappelijke denken (edizione 2023)

di Carlo Rovelli

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"The bestselling author of Seven Brief Lessons on Physics illuminates the nature of science through the revolutionary ideas of the Greek philosopher Anaximander Over two millennia ago, the prescient insights of Anaximander paved the way for cosmology, physics, geography, meteorology, and biology, setting in motion a new way of seeing the world. His legacy includes the revolutionary ideas that the Earth floats in a void, that animals evolved, that the world can be understood in natural rather than supernatural terms, and that universal laws govern all phenomena. He introduced a new mode of rational thinking with an openness to uncertainty and the progress of knowledge. In this elegant work, the renowned theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli brings to light the importance of Anaximander's overlooked influence on modern science. He examines Anaximander not from the point of view of a historian or as an expert in Greek philosophy, but as a scientist interested in the deep nature of scientific thinking, which Rovelli locates in the critical and rebellious ability to reimagine the world again and again. Anaximander celebrates the radical lack of certainty that defines the scientific quest for knowledge"--… (altro)
Utente:rvdm61
Titolo:Anaximander en de geboorte van het wetenschappelijke denken
Autori:Carlo Rovelli
Info:Amsterdam Uitgeverij Nieuwezijds © 2023
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca
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Etichette:filosofie, wetenschap, italiaanse auteurs

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Che cos'è la scienza: la rivoluzione di Anassimandro di Carlo Rovelli

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Questo è uno splendido testo che dimostra come si possa scrivere un agile saggio di cultura tout court da un punto di vista squisitamente scientifico, da parte di un fisico teorico attento ai fondamenti anche filosofici. Scardina molti luoghi comuni sulla scienza e sul relativismo, rimarcando il ruolo decisivo del pensiero greco nella costruzione della modernità e, in definitiva, del progresso umano. Lo consiglierei anche ai liceali, come minimo per fare giustizia del pensiero presocratico, ma soprattutto per l'importanza del ruolo culturale del pensiero scientifico.
  cmnit | Apr 17, 2013 |
Why Anaximander deserves to be called ‘the first scientist’. A mere fragment survives of the Greek philosopher’s work, but other sources attest to his bold ideas about the universe, human evolution and the weather.

It’s a daring thing to write a whole book about a man while confessing early on that ‘we know almost nothing of his readings, life, character, appearance or voyages’, and of whose writings only a three-line fragment survives. Luckily, as with many ancient authors, the works of the 6th-century BC philosopher Anaximander are described in subsequent treatises, and a resourceful writer can infer much from this evidence about what might have been ‘the first great scientific revolution in human history’.

Anaximander, a Greek citizen of the cosmopolitan port Miletus, on the coast of what is now Turkey, was as far as we know the first human to say that the Earth was an object floating in space with no means of support (elephants, turtles, or what have you). Why didn’t it fall? Because there was no preferred direction in which to fall: it was indifferent to directions. (It would take millennia before it was understood that you could say the Earth is constantly falling around the sun.) So, in contrast to all other ancient civilisations, which pictured the heavens above and the Earth below, Anaximander insisted that the very ideas of ‘up’ and ‘down’ were relative.

The sole example of his own verbatim writing we have, meanwhile, from a treatise On Nature, is brief enough to quote in full.

All things originate from one another, and vanish into one another according to necessity; they give to each other justice and recompense for injustice in conformity with the order of Time.

In Carlo Rovelli’s rather thrilling exegesis, this too becomes revolutionary, both in its positive claims – things happen out of ‘necessity’, so there is a causal order to the universe; all things are made up of more fundamental entities – and in what it signally refrains from saying: that any of this is controlled by the gods.

Indeed, according to later authors, Anaximander is also the first to give an entirely naturalistic explanation of weather, doing away with thunderbolt-hurling Zeus and chums. Rain, he says, is water that has evaporated from the ocean and been blown over the land. True! Perhaps most impressively, he intuited that, rather than having been divinely created, human beings must have evolved from earlier life forms and that the first life probably originated in the sea before crawling out on to land.

With this book, first published in Italian in 2009 and already published in English with a small US house in 2016, Rovelli is a long way from being the first to have noticed Anaximander’s importance. No less a luminary than Karl Popper called the Greek’s declaration that the Earth is a body suspended in space ‘one of the boldest, most revolutionary, and most portentous ideas in the whole history of human thinking’. But Rovelli is also addressing the present, mounting an energetic attack on the persistence of religious thinking, which on original publication at least might have caught the tail end of the new-atheism bubble but is not really necessary here to buttress his positive arguments.

His polemical theme, above all, is a laudable and passionate request that, as a culture, we navigate better between the Scylla and Charybdis of absolute scientism (the idea that we know everything for sure) and absolute relativism (the idea that all ‘ways of knowing’, as the pomo anthropologists have it, are equally valid). In contrast to the former, he pictures science as a ship of Theseus, of which every part is subject to change – yet still it floats. As a punchy counter-argument to the latter trend, meanwhile, Rovelli points out that when the Jesuits showed Chinese astronomers in the 17th century that the Earth was actually round, in contrast to their own traditional flat-Earthism, they immediately adopted the idea: not because it was imposed by colonialism, but because they could see that it was true. So, too, he argues correctly that the scientific tradition kickstarted by Anaximander is not merely ‘western science’ but the inheritance of the whole world.

‘I’ve given up giving up things for Lent.’
Against the 20th-century giants of philosophy of science, meanwhile, especially Thomas Kuhn and his The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Rovelli wants to emphasise unfashionable notions of progress in scientific history. In mathematics, for example, ‘the Babylonians developed the concepts that, in our time, are studied by seven-year-olds’, while science as a whole is more cumulative (and so reliable) than the expounders of abrupt theoretical change imagine.

Rovelli is himself a theoretical physicist as well as a bestselling populariser of physics, and his wonder at his subject – science, he insists, is ‘visionary’; also ‘critical and rebellious’ – is palpable, even unto a sort of Wittgensteinian mysticism. (‘The very distinction between the world and our thought is an enigma,’ he writes gnomically.) Which is not to say that the book ignores more earthly matters, as when the author lets his hair down and indulges in some sardonic punditry:

Each time that we – as a nation, a group, a continent, or a religion – look inward in celebration of our specific identity, we do nothing but lionise our own limits and sing of our own stupidity.

The cosmopolitan geniuses of the ancient world who began the systemic study of natural philosophy, one imagines, would have agreed.
aggiunto da AntonioGallo | modificaThe Spectator, Steven Poole (Mar 4, 2023)
 
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"The bestselling author of Seven Brief Lessons on Physics illuminates the nature of science through the revolutionary ideas of the Greek philosopher Anaximander Over two millennia ago, the prescient insights of Anaximander paved the way for cosmology, physics, geography, meteorology, and biology, setting in motion a new way of seeing the world. His legacy includes the revolutionary ideas that the Earth floats in a void, that animals evolved, that the world can be understood in natural rather than supernatural terms, and that universal laws govern all phenomena. He introduced a new mode of rational thinking with an openness to uncertainty and the progress of knowledge. In this elegant work, the renowned theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli brings to light the importance of Anaximander's overlooked influence on modern science. He examines Anaximander not from the point of view of a historian or as an expert in Greek philosophy, but as a scientist interested in the deep nature of scientific thinking, which Rovelli locates in the critical and rebellious ability to reimagine the world again and again. Anaximander celebrates the radical lack of certainty that defines the scientific quest for knowledge"--

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Tutte le civiltà umane hanno sempre pensato che il mondo fosse fatto di Cielo sopra e Terra sotto. Tutte, eccetto una. Per i Greci la Terra era un sasso che galleggia nello spazio; sotto la Terra non c'era altra terra, né tartarughe, né le gigantesche colonne di cui parla la Bibbia. Come hanno fatto i Greci a comprendere che la Terra è sospesa nel nulla? Chi lo ha capito e come? È di questa straordinaria «rivoluzione scientifica» di Anassimandro che l'autore ci parla, e che Karl Popper ha definito «una delle idee più audaci, rivoluzionarie e portentose dell'intera storia del pensiero umano". E del conflitto che ha aperto, che ancora brucia. E della natura del pensiero scientifico, della sua capacità critica e ribelle, della forza con cui sovverte l'ordine delle cose e la nostra immagine del mondo; di un sapere scientifico estremamente efficace e «sbagliato» al tempo stesso, come ci insegna la fisica del xx secolo. Parlare di Anassimandro è riflettere su cosa significhi la rivoluzione scientifica aperta da Einstein.
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