How in "The Colors of the Sunrise," Modern Sociology, Western Philosophy, and the falsifiability theory, contribute to the understanding of new cognitive schemas, and produce healthy ideas expanding the blocked thought through dialectics and the unity of science.
The interpretation is based on Habermas’s idea of “communicative action,” Karl Popper's theory about the growth of scientific knowledge (Karl Popper, 1962), the theory of falsifiability, and the work of the anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss.
The old idea of the existence of a dialectical basis for the approach of human structures
(utilizing linguistics, mathematics, materialistic approaches, economic theories, political theory, history of science, ecological approaches, etc.), has its origination in different theories, starting from those of Plato, Plotinus, Heraclitus, Spinoza, Descartes, and Leibniz.
It has also been enriched by the work of contemporary philosophers (Bertrand Russell, Levinas, Ricoeur, Wittgenstein, Derrida, Foucault). Their work
has mainly focused on philosophy, language, and mathematics.
From Chapter 2 in “The Colors of the Sunrise”
Commentaires