Contemporary Natural Philosophy and Philosophies
Other text in scientific journal, 2018
Since knowledge tends to spontaneously fragment while it grows, Philosophies takes existing diversity as a resource and a starting point for a new synthesis. The idea of broad, inclusive knowledge is in fact not so new. From the beginning, natural philosophy included all contemporary knowledge about nature. Newton was a natural philosopher, as were Bohr, Einstein, Prigogine, Weizsäcker, and Wheeler—to name but a few. Today, the unifying picture of the natural/physical world is sorely missing among the isolated silos of particular scientific domains, each with its own specific ontologies, methodologies, and epistemologies.
From the profound need for connected and common knowledge, new trends towards synthesis have emerged in the last decades. One major theme is complexity science, especially when applied to biology or medicine, which helps us to grasp the importance of connectedness between present-day disparate pieces of knowledge—frameworks, theories, approaches, etc. Related to this is the emergence of network science, which studies structures of nodes (actors) and edges as connections between them.
interdisciplinarity
unity of sciences
natural sciences
complexity
sciences
natural philosophy
Author
Gordana Dodig Crnkovic
Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction design
Mälardalens högskola
Marcin Schroeder
Akita International University
Philosophies
24099287 (eISSN)
Vol. 3 42 1-4Morphological Computing in Cognitive Systems (MORCOM@COGS)
Swedish Research Council (VR) (2015-05359), 2016-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.
Areas of Advance
Information and Communication Technology
Driving Forces
Sustainable development
Subject Categories
History of Ideas
Philosophy
Social Sciences Interdisciplinary
Roots
Basic sciences
DOI
10.3390/philosophies3040042