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Consilience. The unity of knowledge
Cover of the first edition
AuthorE. O. Wilson
LanguageEnglish
SubjectConsilience
Publication date
1998
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages332 pp.
ISBN9780679450771

Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge is a 1998 book by the biologist E. O. Wilson, in which the author discusses methods that have been used to unite the sciences and might in the future unite them with the humanities.[1]

Wilson uses the term consilience to describe the synthesis of knowledge from different specialized fields of human endeavor.

Definition of consilience

This book defines consilience as "Literally a 'jumping together' of knowledge by the linking of facts and fact-based theory across disciplines to create a common groundwork of explanation."[2] The word is borrowed from Whewell's phrase the consilience of inductions in his book Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences. Whewell posited that this consilience of inductions occurs when an induction obtained from one class of facts coincides with an induction obtained from a different class. In this way a consilience is a test of the truth of a theory.[3]

Examples of consilience discussed by Wilson

Chapter 1 The Ionian enchantment

Chapter 2 The great branches of learning

Chapter 3 The Enlightenment

Chapter 4 The natural sciences

Chapter 5 Ariadne's thread

Chapter 6 The mind

Chapter 7 From genes to culture

Chapter 8 - 12

The remaining chapters are titled Chapter 8 The fitness of human nature, Chapter 9 The social sciences, Chapter 10 The arts and their interpretation, Chapter 11 Ethics and religion, Chapter 12 To what end?

See also

References

  1. ^ Wilson, Edward. "Consilience. The unity of knowledge" (PDF). wtf.tw. Vintage Books, Random House, New York. Retrieved 25 January 2022. I remember very well the time I was captured by the dream of unified learning. It was in the early fall of 1947, when at eighteen I came up from Mobile to Tuscaloosa to enter my sophomore year at the University of Alabama. A beginning biologist, fired by adolescent enthusiasm but short on theory and vision, I had schooled myself in natural history with field guides carried in a satchel during solitary excursions into the woodlands and along the freshwater streams of my native state.(Beginning of Chapter 1. The Ionian Enchantment.)
  2. ^ Wilson, Consilience, p. 7.
  3. ^ Jamieson 1998.
  4. ^ Hobson, JA; McCarley, RW (December 1977). "The brain as a dream state generator: an activation-synthesis hypothesis of the dream process". American Journal of Psychiatry. 134 (12): 1335–1348. doi:10.1176/ajp.134.12.1335. PMID 21570.
  5. ^ Stickgold, Robert (2001). "Finding the Stuff that Dreams are Made Of". The Scientific World Journal. 1: 211–212. doi:10.1100/tsw.2001.38. PMC 6084183. PMID 12805675.
  6. ^ Berry, Wendell. "Life is a Miracle" (PDF). Retrieved 19 January 2023.

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