Tomorrow is yesterday

File
Contributors
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2013
Description
Protosciences, or new sciences trying to establish their legitimacy, are ubiquitous in literature. In the old stories we hear of alchemists who can only dream of the discoveries that modern chemists take for granted, and in the new stories we hear of travelers moving faster than light as our greatest physicists attempt to make that fantasy a reality. Limiting our viewpoint to the modern scientific reductionist view of the universe not only makes little sense if we consider Michael Polanyi's theories of emergence and 'personal knowledge', but it robs medieval scholars for the conceptual credit they are due for theories they could not satisfactorily explain by the future's standards, and stifles the sorts of fantastic possibilities that are opened by the great science-fiction authors. Medieval authors' expositions of protoscientific thought laid the ground work for our own modern disciplines, and by reexamining how this happened we can develop a new appreciation for the power of the imagination.
Note

by Robert James Leivers.

Language
Type
Form
Extent
vi, 73 p..
Identifier
860991164
OCLC Number
860991164
Additional Information
by Robert James Leivers.
Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2013.
Includes bibliography.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
System requirements: Adobe Reader.
Date Backup
2013
Date Text
2013
Date Issued (EDTF)
2013
Extension


FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing15856", creator="creator:NBURWICK", creation_date="2013-10-21 10:10:04", modified_by="super:FAUDIG", modification_date="2013-10-21 10:58:37"

IID
FADT3362480
Organizations
Person Preferred Name

Leivers, Robert James.
Graduate College
Physical Description

electronic
vi, 73 p..
Title Plain
Tomorrow is yesterday
Use and Reproduction
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Origin Information


Boca Raton, Fla.

Florida Atlantic University
2013
Place

Boca Raton, Fla.
Title
Tomorrow is yesterday
Other Title Info

Tomorrow is yesterday
protoscience from the medieval manuscript to the golden age of science-fiction