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179019

(1995) Science, mind and art, Dordrecht, Springer.

A gloss on Robert S. Cohen's ambiguities of science

Walter Muelder

pp. 279-294

Victor Weisskopf, who like Robert S. Cohen has an interactive understanding of science, society and nature, and a concern for the ecological whole, has stated: "Compassion without curiosity is ineffective. Curiosity without compassion is inhuman."1 By curiosity Weisskopf means science; and his compassion is global concern. Cohen's professional contributions move from the scientific part to the philosophical whole and from the social whole to the personal part. His life and work show both extraordinary intellectual curiosity and profound social and ethical insight. This present essay is a gloss on "Reflections on the Ambiguity of Science' which appeared in Foundations of Ethics in 1983.2 He meditated on two quotations, one by C. S. Lewis, "What we call man's power over nature turns out to be a power exercised by some men over other men, with nature as an instrument;" the other by Max Horkheimer, "The ideological dimension of science comes to light, above all, in what science closes its eyes to." Some of the philosophical and ethical concerns of Horkheimer and Cohen were pressed on my consciousness as a student under the former at the University of Frankfurt in 1930–31. My appreciation for Cohen emerges from long association and friendship with him at Boston University.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-0469-2_16

Full citation:

Muelder, W. (1995)., A gloss on Robert S. Cohen's ambiguities of science, in K. Gavroglu, J. Stachel & M. W. Wartofsky (eds.), Science, mind and art, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 279-294.

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