Before Kuhn, most people viewed science as a ladder. You add a rung of knowledge, climb up, and repeat. Kuhn argued that science is actually a series of long plateaus interrupted by earthquakes. He broke this down into a cycle:
We see social movements that don't just ask for new laws, but for a fundamental shift in how we define "equality" or "identity." The Takeaway
In the landscape of 20th-century thought, few books have fundamentally altered how we view human progress as much as Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions . Even decades after its 1962 release, its core thesis remains a masterclass in how ideas evolve—not through steady, linear growth, but through explosive, disruptive change. Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions at F...
A new paradigm emerges that explains the old data and the new anomalies. The ladder isn’t just extended; it’s moved to a different wall entirely. What is a Paradigm, Anyway?
Kuhn’s insights have escaped the lab and entered the boardroom, the tech incubator, and the political arena. Before Kuhn, most people viewed science as a ladder
Should we dive deeper into how affects modern political debates, or
The anomalies pile up until they can no longer be ignored. The old way of thinking begins to crumble. He broke this down into a cycle: We
One of Kuhn’s most provocative ideas was "incommensurability." He suggested that proponents of different paradigms literally live in different worlds. When Copernicus said the Earth moves around the sun, he wasn't just correcting a math error in the Ptolemaic system; he was redefining what "Earth" and "Motion" meant.