STS Circle at Harvard
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Henry Cowles
Princeton, History

on
Vocabularies of Method: Pragmatism and the History of Science


Monday, April 22
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Today, April 17.

Abstract: Science has always had methods, but “the scientific method” has a 
history. That history is rooted in American debates over the meaning and 
authority of science in the decades around 1900. Alongside the rise of both 
evolutionary theory and the experimental ideal, a network of figures from the 
emerging fields of psychology, philosophy, and the natural sciences forged a 
"vocabulary of method" in the wake of the Civil War. That vocabulary had 
profound effects on the shape of the disciplines, the understanding of human 
nature, and the rising authority of science in that period—and, in many ways, 
is still with us today. This talk seeks to demonstrate two things. First, it 
shows how the modern "scientific method" emerged from the application of 
evolutionary theory to the study of human cognition. Specifically, it argues 
that natural selection served as an analogy for mental processes, with the 
result that science itself was re-imagined in explicitly evolutionary terms. 
Second, it suggests that this model continues to underwrite the way many 
scholars discuss science today. Though this recursiveness poses certain 
problems for the historian, it also affords an opportunity to reflect on the 
assumptions built into the study of modern science.




Biography: Henry Cowles is a PhD candidate in the Program in History of Science 
in the History Department at Princeton University. He was a visiting fellow 
with the the Harvard STS Program in the spring of 2012. Henry works on the 
intellectual and cultural history of the United States in the nineteenth and 
twentieth centuries, with particular emphasis on scientific developments and 
the way those developments were theorized and received. His dissertation, 
titled "'A Method Only': The Evolving Meaning of Science in the United States, 
1859-1929," treats debates about scientific methodology in the decades around 
1900 as debates about the meaning of science itself. It argues that the modern 
"scientific method" emerged as philosophers, psychologists, and scientists 
argued with one another about the nature of knowledge. Henry's broader 
interests include the long history of evolutionary psychology and the impact of 
pragmatism on the history and philosophy of science.

A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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