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Boris Hessen : Physics and Philosophy in the Soviet Union, 1927-1931 : Neglected Debates on Emergence and Reduction

Chris Talbot, Talbot(Edited by)Olga Pattison, Pattison(Edited by)Chris Talbot, Talbot(Translated by)
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This book presents key works of Boris Hessen, outstanding Soviet philosopher of science, available here in English for the first time. Quality translations are accompanied by an editors' introduction and annotations. Boris Hessen is known in history of science circles for his "Social and Economic Roots of Newton's Principia" presented in London (1931), which inspired new approaches in the West. As a philosopher and a physicist, he was tasked with developing a Marxist approach to science in the 1920s. He studied the history of physics to clarify issues such as reductionism and causality as they applied to new developments. With the philosophers called the "Dialecticians", his debates with the opposing "Mechanists" on the issue of emergence are still worth studying and largely ignored in the many recent works on this subject. Taken as a whole, the book is a goldmine of insights into both the foundations of physics and Soviet history.

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Product Details
Springer
3030700461 / 9783030700461
Paperback
24/05/2021
180 pages
156 x 234 mm, 262 grams