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How do we spark new scientific discoveries? How can we accelerate new breakthroughs in science? These are some of the biggest unsolved questions in science.
Many believe that discoveries arise by chance or serendipity.
The Engine of Scientific Discovery illustrates, for the first time, how we can actively speed up the pace of new breakthroughs by developing better methods and tools of discovery which enable us to see and think in entirely new ways. New tools are the lenses through which we discover what we often did not even know existed: improved microscopes uncovered microorganisms and viruses, x-ray methods exposed the structure of DNA, particle accelerators detected subatomic particles, and advanced telescopes revealed galaxies.
This book explores science's biggest discoveries--spanning all Nobel Prize discoveries and over 200 other major discoveries. The findings are striking: science's over 750 major discoveries have been triggered by first developing a new method or instrument that made the breakthrough possible. In fact, most discoveries are now uncovered within just a few years after designing the needed tool. This pattern reveals how our transformative new tools are
The Engine of Scientific Discovery--a fundamental principle of scientific progress overlooked until now.
By shifting our attention to inventing new tools as the key to advancing new breakthroughs, we can spark a methodological revolution in science. Instead of waiting for breakthroughs, we can actively design and build new tools of discoveries. What if the next great breakthroughs depend not just on asking better questions, but developing better tools to ask and answer them--on entirely new ways of discovering? A new theory of discovery emerges, offering a roadmap for accelerating progress across science.
List of contents
- Introduction
- PART I THE DRIVERS OF SCIENCE AND DISCOVERY
- 1: Sparking Discovery: How New Methods and Tools Trigger Science's Major Breakthroughs
- 2: Engineering Serendipity: How New Tools Make Unexpected Discoveries Possible-and Highly Likely
- 34: Revolutionary Paradigm Shifts or Cumulative Progress?: Rethinking Scientific Progress and the Scientific MethodsDiscovery-Makers: How Younger Age, Interdisciplinary Education and Resources Can Support Discoverers and Our New Cutting-Edge Tools
- 5: The Birth of Fields: How New Methods and Tools Launch New Disciplines
- 6: The Discovery Engine: How We Invent the Powerful Methods and Tools of Discovery-and a New Field: The Methodology of Science
- PART II THE ORIGINS AND FOUNDATIONS OF SCIENCE AND DISCOVERY
- 7: The Origins of Our Toolbox: How Our Mind's Method-Making Abilities Have Driven Science-and Civilisation
- 8: Homo Methodologicus: How Our Unique Evolved Method-Making Species Became Problem Solvers and Knowledge Creators
- 9: The New Methods-Driven Discovery Theory: Five Lenses on How Tools Power Science
- PART III THE PRESENT LIMITS AND FUTURE OF SCIENCE AND DISCOVERY
- 10: The Edge of Discovery: How the Boundaries of Our Toolbox Set the Current Boundaries of Science
- 11: Pushing the Limits of Science: How We Accelerate New Discoveries by Extending Our Powerful Toolbox
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Index
About the author
Alexander Krauss is a Research Associate at the London School of Economics and Affiliated Professor at the Barcelona School of Economics and Spanish National Research Council. After his PhD, he worked with governments and the World Bank for five years, before teaching at University College London. He is the author of
Science of Science (OUP 2024). His research interests span the science of science, metascience, innovation, and the economics of science.