The New England Journal of Medicine
e-mail icon  FREE NEJM E-TOC    HOME   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   CURRENT ISSUE   |   PAST ISSUES   |   COLLECTIONS   |    Advanced Search
Sign in | Get NEJM's E-Mail Table of Contents — Free | Subscribe
 
A correction has been published: N Engl J Med 1997;336(11):815.

Book Review
PreviousPrevious
Volume 336:300-301 January 23, 1997 Number 4
NextNext

The Flight from Science and Reason

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.

 Sign up for free e-toc
 

This Article
-Full Text
-Purchase this article

Tools and Services
-Add to Personal Archive
-Add to Citation Manager
-Notify a Friend
-E-mail When Cited

More Information
-Related Article
(Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Vol. 775.) Edited by Paul R. Gross, Norman Levitt, and Martin W. Lewis. 591 pp. New York, New York Academy of Sciences, 1996. $95 (cloth); $95 (paper). ISBN 1-57331-002-6 (cloth); 1-57331-003-4 (paper).

During the past 25 years, opposing forces have been waging a battle over the validity of science and the scientific method. This culture war, sometimes pursued with fierce polemics, began in the 1960s with growing resistance to the view that the scientific method is the only source of knowledge — that a statement is meaningful only if it is empirically verifiable. The opponents of science are not just a ragtag band of New Age spiritualists, psychics, and fundamentalists. They are also university scholars who contest empiricism on philosophical, historical, and sociological grounds. Their argument, in broad terms, is that science . . . [Full Text of this Article]




HOME  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  SEARCH  |  CURRENT ISSUE  |  PAST ISSUES  |  COLLECTIONS  |  PRIVACY  |  HELP  |  beta.nejm.org

Comments and questions? Please contact us.

The New England Journal of Medicine is owned, published, and copyrighted © 2008 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.