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The Ascent of Instrumentalism in the Natural Sciences and its Consequences

Natiello, Mario LU orcid and Solari, Hernán Gustavo (2025) In Science & Philosophy - Journal of epistemology, science and philosophy 13(2). p.9-47
Abstract
We discuss instrumentalism as a component of the social changes that accompanied the second industrial revolution, following particularly the case of Germany. These changes constituted a departure from the Enlightenment tradition of natural philosophers towards a new approach to knowledge. We claim that instrumentalism cannot be separated from the disciplining of science that produced the sciences and further specialism, nor can it be separated from the intervention of the State, in representation of society, that conceived science as an economic resource, invested in it, in its teaching and use, making scientific knowledge an instrument of massive use, massively developed. But science as “economy of thought” (a view developed by Mach and... (More)
We discuss instrumentalism as a component of the social changes that accompanied the second industrial revolution, following particularly the case of Germany. These changes constituted a departure from the Enlightenment tradition of natural philosophers towards a new approach to knowledge. We claim that instrumentalism cannot be separated from the disciplining of science that produced the sciences and further specialism, nor can it be separated from the intervention of the State, in representation of society, that conceived science as an economic resource, invested in it, in its teaching and use, making scientific knowledge an instrument of massive use, massively developed. But science as “economy of thought” (a view developed by Mach and others) has collateral casualties; ranking first among them is: free reasoning. The changes in education implemented in Prussia and the personalities displayed by the leaders of the new ethos of science produced (as expected) social conditions in which the development of critical reason was impeded. Only instrumental reason developed,
thus producing technoscience, a constant development of new techniques (instruments) and a decline in the human constitution of the intellectual elite. The distance between the professional graduated from the universities and logic machines decreased by the improvement of the second and the decline in autonomous, self-controlled reasoning of the former. (Less)
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author
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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Instrumental reason, guild of specialists, artificial intelligence
in
Science & Philosophy - Journal of epistemology, science and philosophy
volume
13
issue
2
pages
39 pages
ISSN
2282-7757
DOI
10.23756/sp.v13i2.1730
project
Dynamical systems
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f76aba75-225f-4ebf-b4e8-ea2daaa1c9cc
date added to LUP
2026-01-31 16:38:07
date last changed
2026-03-16 11:25:10
@article{f76aba75-225f-4ebf-b4e8-ea2daaa1c9cc,
  abstract     = {{We discuss instrumentalism as a component of the social changes that accompanied the second industrial revolution, following particularly the case of Germany. These changes constituted a departure from the Enlightenment tradition of natural philosophers towards a new approach to knowledge. We claim that instrumentalism cannot be separated from the disciplining of science that produced the sciences and further specialism, nor can it be separated from the intervention of the State, in representation of society, that conceived science as an economic resource, invested in it, in its teaching and use, making scientific knowledge an instrument of massive use, massively developed. But science as “economy of thought” (a view developed by Mach and others) has collateral casualties; ranking first among them is: free reasoning. The changes in education implemented in Prussia and the personalities displayed by the leaders of the new ethos of science produced (as expected) social conditions in which the development of critical reason was impeded. Only instrumental reason developed,<br/>thus producing technoscience, a constant development of new techniques (instruments) and a decline in the human constitution of the intellectual elite. The distance between the professional graduated from the universities and logic machines decreased by the improvement of the second and the decline in autonomous, self-controlled reasoning of the former.}},
  author       = {{Natiello, Mario and Solari, Hernán Gustavo}},
  issn         = {{2282-7757}},
  keywords     = {{Instrumental reason; guild of specialists; artificial intelligence}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{9--47}},
  series       = {{Science & Philosophy - Journal of epistemology, science and philosophy}},
  title        = {{The Ascent of Instrumentalism in the Natural Sciences and its Consequences}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.23756/sp.v13i2.1730}},
  doi          = {{10.23756/sp.v13i2.1730}},
  volume       = {{13}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}