Article ID: CBB265822428

Beyond specialization: Generalization and harmony as academic ideals in the Netherlands around 1900 (2015)

unapi

A standard account of how the sciences developed around 1900 tends to identify specialization and an increasingly strong pragmatic orientation as the driving forces shaping the sciences in this period. We want to oppose this account: Focussing on a number of inaugural lectures delivered at Dutch universities around 1900, we emphasize the prominence of integrative ideals, and the equally notable absence of references to specialization. The notion of unity upon which these ideals are based is extremely rich: the unity of a person, unity of education and research and unity within the system of the sciences all are aimed at simultaneously. Remarkably, this attitude is not a reactionary one, but is intimately related precisely to the emergence of new disciplines.The main goal of this paper is to establish the presence and the relevance, across the disciplines, of these integrative ideals. This leads to a number of important questions that need to be asked with respect to the dynamics of science in this period: how can the relevant notions of unity and harmony be conceptualized? and – a question not to be pursued here – how, then, did the ideal of specialization become as dominant as it appears to be today?

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Authors & Contributors
Casper, Stephen T.
Marco Tompitak
Beckers, Danny
Seth, Sanjay
Boele, Anita
De Moor, Tine
Publishers
Amsterdam University Press
Concepts
Discipline formation
Specialization
Medicine
Unity of science; unity of knowledge
Cross-national comparison
Psychology
People
Pannekoek, Anton
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
Early modern
Modern
20th century, late
Places
Netherlands
Great Britain
United States
Japan
Greece
Canada
Institutions
Leiden Observatory
Vienna Circle
Rockefeller Foundation
Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.)
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