(free article from Physics Today)

Albert Einstein as a Philosopher of Science

Einstein's philosophical habit of mind, cultivated by undergraduate training
and lifelong dialogue, had a profound effect on the way he did physics.

Don A. Howard


Nowadays, explicit engagement with the philosophy of science plays almost no
role in the training of physicists or in physics research. What little the
student learns about philosophical issues is typically learned casually, by
a kind of intellectual osmosis. One picks up ideas and opinions in the
lecture hall, in the laboratory, and in collaboration with one's supervisor.
Careful reflection on philosophical ideas is rare. Even rarer is systematic
instruction. Worse still, publicly indulging an interest in philosophy of
science is often treated as a social blunder. To be fair, more than a few
physicists do think philosophically. Still, explicitly philosophical
approaches to physics are the exception. Things were not always so...

http://www.physicstoday.org/vol-58/iss-12/p34.html

Reply via email to