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A Philosopher for Our Time
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11917 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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8 / 1987 |
5,456 Words |
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Richard Gelwick Richard Gelwick is associate professor and chairman of
the Department of Medical Humanities and Behavioral
Medicine, College of Osteopathic Medicine, University of
New England, Biddeford, Maine. He is also president of
the Maine Bioethics Network. |
In 1946, Michael Polanyi gave a series of lectures entitled "Science, Faith and Society," which soon became a focus of controversy. Physical chemist and member of the Royal Society, Polanyi asserted that blind belief in science was as authoritarian as the blind religious faith of the Middle Ages. Freedom and dignity, he said, are as endangered by uncritical acceptance of science as by dogmatisms in the past.
Polanyi engaged in many lectures and discussions on this topic around the world. In 1948, the University of Manchester made the unusual arrangement of allowing Polanyi to exchange his chair in physical chemistry for one in social thought, free of teaching duties. Polanyi devoted himself to the task of showing how the modern worldview, founded upon a mistaken set of beliefs about science, had contributed to the atrocious conflicts of the twentieth century.
Equipped with an understanding of science gained through a distinguished career n physical chemistry as well as his personal observation of the Russian Revolution and the rise of Nazism, Polanyi linked the surge of violence in this century with the widespread belief in scientific objectivism. When Polanyi died on February 22, 1976, he left a new theory of how humans achieve knowledge and advance civilization's development. This new theory, called "tacit knowing" and its concrete implications, called "a society of explorers," speak to the deepest aspects of our world crisis.
An outline of this bold proposal for dealing with the nature of science, beliefs, and their impact upon society includes four major concepts in his thought: (1) the destruction of beliefs and ideals, (2) tacit
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