The Permission to Be Right: How Knowledge Advances — and Why It Sometimes Doesn't
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Beschrijving
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Why do some knowledge systems transform when they encounter error, while others - equally intelligent, rigorous, and successful - absorb the anomaly and continue?In The Permission to Be Right, Phani Kurada argues that knowledge does not advance merely because truth becomes available. It advances when structural conditions make the existing framework impossible to preserve. Systems do not break because anomalies exist. They break when anomalies become impossible to absorb.The book traces this dynamic across two very different domains. The first is Indian mathematical astronomy: ¿ryabhäa's eclipse theory and sine tables in the fifth century, Bh¿skara II's Sanskrit mathematical pedagogy, M¿dhava and the Kerala School's infinite series for pi and trigonometric functions, and N¿lakä¿ha Somay¿j¿'s geo-heliocentric planetary model before Tycho Brahe. The second is contemporary American medicine: medical error, low-value care, diagnostic uncertainty, and the unfinished architecture of patient safety, set beside earlier moments of medical correction involving Semmelweis and childbed fever, James Lind and scurvy, and Barry Marshall and H. pylori.Drawing on Thomas Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, and Nassim Taleb while moving beyond them, Kurada develops a framework for understanding when anomalies become verdicts - and when successful systems remain asleep inside their own competence. The result is a comparative intellectual history that rejects both triumphalist narratives of Western progress and romantic claims of suppressed Eastern genius.For readers interested in the history of science, Indian mathematics and astronomy, medical epistemology, patient safety, and how institutions learn, The Permission to Be Right offers a new vocabulary for an old question: what must a system possess before it can see the error that would change it?
Why do some knowledge systems transform when they encounter error, while others - equally intelligent, rigorous, and successful - absorb the anomaly and continue?In The Permission to Be Right, Phani Kurada argues that knowledge does not advance merely because truth becomes available. It advances when structural conditions make the existing framework impossible to preserve. Systems do not break because anomalies exist. They break when anomalies become impossible to absorb.The book traces this dynamic across two very different domains. The first is Indian mathematical astronomy: ¿ryabhäa's eclipse theory and sine tables in the fifth century, Bh¿skara II's Sanskrit mathematical pedagogy, M¿dhava and the Kerala School's infinite series for pi and trigonometric functions, and N¿lakä¿ha Somay¿j¿'s geo-heliocentric planetary model before Tycho Brahe. The second is contemporary American medicine: medical error, low-value care, diagnostic uncertainty, and the unfinished architecture of patient safety, set beside earlier moments of medical correction involving Semmelweis and childbed fever, James Lind and scurvy, and Barry Marshall and H. pylori.Drawing on Thomas Kuhn, Imre Lakatos, and Nassim Taleb while moving beyond them, Kurada develops a framework for understanding when anomalies become verdicts - and when successful systems remain asleep inside their own competence. The result is a comparative intellectual history that rejects both triumphalist narratives of Western progress and romantic claims of suppressed Eastern genius.For readers interested in the history of science, Indian mathematics and astronomy, medical epistemology, patient safety, and how institutions learn, The Permission to Be Right offers a new vocabulary for an old question: what must a system possess before it can see the error that would change it?
AmazonPages: 190, Paperback, Kurada Press
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