Since the Enlightenment, science has been seen as an objective, true
method of explanation about the physical and mathematical laws that
explain and govern the universe. The 20th Century has shown that science
is also a human enterprise, informed by idealogy and other assumptions.
In this book, distinguished historian and philosopher of science Arthur
Miller examines these and other important questions about what and how
we know about the world. Dr. Miller also discusses, in non-technical
language, our current ideas about the nature of scientific thought and
explanation, its relation to truth, and the relationship between
scientific and common sense. Does science, in its historical claim as an
exalted endeavor, stand above other human activities?