What is Scientific Ideology?

Volume 5|Issue 17| Autumn 2016 |Articles

Abstract

Canguilhem defines "scientific ideology" as the discourse that precedes a science in the process of foundation that itself relies on an existing science whose methodology and suppositions it emulates. In its aspiration to become a science, the discourse acquires the character of a "scientific ideology." It is in the nature of this ideology to form an epistemological obstacle, but simultaneously through the problems and criticism it raises, the discourse forms the impetus to found the new science, which dislodges this ideology and does not entirely appear in the place the ideology indicated, but rather appears displaced.

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Professor of Dermatology and STDs at Tishreen University, Syria. He is the author of The Intellectuals’ Utopia on the Syrian Coast, and has translated the work of Jean-François Dortier and Albert Jacquard from French into Arabic.

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