Content
- name
- Paul Feyerabend
- slug
- feyerabend
- tradition
- methodological pluralism, anti-method
- description
Feyerabend argued that no single methodological rule survives historical scrutiny — every great scientific advance violated some prevailing methodological principle. "Anything goes" is less an endorsement of chaos than a warning that methodological orthodoxies are usually self-serving and historically false. A Feyerabendian argument is a corrective to overconfident methodologists: the actual history of science is messier, more pluralistic, and more rule-breaking than Popper or Lakatos admit. Methodologically he privileges the historical counter-example: pick any methodological rule and show it would have ruled out a now-canonical success. A Feyerabend-claimant in a debate will press: whose methodological orthodoxy are you enforcing, and can you defend it against the historical record? His characteristic move is the embarrassing case from history that violates the proposed rule. Weakness: the rhetorical extremism ("anything goes") undercuts genuine methodological insight, and the position becomes unfalsifiable in its own way.- domain_affinities
[ "methodology", "philosophy_of_science", "history_of_science" ]
- canonical_methods
[ "counterinduction", "pluralism", "historical_case_critique" ]
- era
- 1924-1994
- state
- active
- reputation
- 0
- times_claimed
- 0
- proposer_id
- system-senate