Indian experiences with science: Considerations for history, philosophy, and science education

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Abstract

This chapter explores how perspectives on science drawn from Indian experiences can contribute to the interface between history and philosophy of science (HPS) and science education (SE). HPS is encoded in science texts in the various presuppositions that underlie both the content and the way the content is presented. Thus, a deeper engagement with contemporary work in HPS will be of great significance to science teaching. By drawing on the notion of multicultural origins of science as well as redefining the nature of science debate by invoking the Indian engagement with science, this chapter aims to make both HPS and SE more sensitive to other cultural understandings of science and scientific method. The last two sections describe ways of drawing on the Indian philosophical traditions that could be relevant for contemporary debates, such as constructivism and teaching critical thinking, in science education.

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Sarukkai, S. (2014). Indian experiences with science: Considerations for history, philosophy, and science education. In International Handbook of Research in History, Philosophy and Science Teaching (pp. 1691–1719). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7654-8_53

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