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  • ...Kuhn]], who developed it in his book ''The [[Copernican revolution (book)|Copernican Revolution]]''. {{main|Copernican revolution (book)}}
    799 bytes (111 words) - 04:42, 4 January 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[Copernican revolution]]
    35 bytes (3 words) - 18:54, 4 December 2007
  • * Crowe, Michael J. ''Theories of the World from Antiquity to the Copernican Revolution.'' (2nd ed. 2001) 229 pp. [http://www.amazon.com/Theories-World-Antiquity- * Kuhn, Thomas S. ''The Copernican Revolution'' (1957) [http://www.amazon.com/Copernican-Revolution-Thomas-S-Kuhn/dp/1567
    2 KB (322 words) - 12:01, 31 January 2008
  • [[Copernican revolution (book)]]
    932 bytes (119 words) - 11:01, 16 January 2010
  • ...in 1957 he published his first book, ''[[Copernican revolution (book)|The Copernican Revolution]].'' After leaving Harvard, Kuhn taught at the [[University of California]]
    4 KB (540 words) - 13:26, 25 January 2011
  • * Kuhn, Thomas S. ''The Copernican revolution: Planetary astronomy in the development of Western thought.'' (1957).
    4 KB (499 words) - 07:16, 5 February 2009
  • Thomas S. Kuhn's ''The Copernican Revolution'' (1957) shaped subsequent views of Copernicus's role in the establishment
    10 KB (1,519 words) - 13:20, 8 November 2012
  • '''The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought''' is a book w ...nlike jigsaw or crossword puzzles. The reader who expects to find in the ''Copernican Revolution'' some contours of Kuhn's renowned philosophy will be disappointed. The ter
    23 KB (3,632 words) - 18:47, 8 April 2014
  • *''The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought'' Harvard Univer
    5 KB (629 words) - 12:23, 19 August 2008
  • * T. S. Kuhn, ''The Copernican Revolution'', Harvard University Press (1957)
    4 KB (618 words) - 16:49, 28 November 2010
  • ...he ''Critique of Pure Reason'', Kant himself described these changes as a 'Copernican Revolution'. Some of his many other works focus upon the consequences of these foundat ...se objects as having to conform to our cognitive faculties. This so-called Copernican Revolution in philosophy amounts to a radical rethink of what it is to be an object. F
    25 KB (4,036 words) - 16:09, 26 November 2008
  • ...ma with moral responsibility to a broader issue, sometimes called [[Kant's Copernican revolution]]:<ref name=Needleman/> ...self likened it, to the revolution brought about by Copernicus — only this Copernican revolution concerned not the movements of the planets and the stars, but the very rela
    33 KB (5,191 words) - 10:39, 6 August 2014
  • After the [[Copernican Revolution]], however, the definition of a planet changed: they are all the bodies tha
    12 KB (1,829 words) - 10:07, 10 January 2021
  • *[[Thomas Kuhn]], astronomy, historiography<ref> Thomas S. Kuhn, ''The Copernican Revolution'' (1957); Kuhn, ''The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.'' (1962, 1970);
    31 KB (4,068 words) - 16:25, 29 February 2024
  • 44 KB (6,711 words) - 20:01, 11 October 2013
  • ..."]].<ref name=Kuhn2/> As an example, Kuhn suggested that the Sun-centric [[Copernican Revolution|Copernican "revolution"]] replaced the Earth-centric views of Ptolemy not b ...ns summarize Kant's views upon the subject-object problem, called ''Kant's Copernican revolution''. It was the inversion of the traditional relation between the observing s
    82 KB (12,424 words) - 15:58, 2 August 2016
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