At my university, the Science department had a science historian in it. He happened to be a friend I'd met through the local Star Trek club, so I spent some time with him.
My own degree course was in computer science, and we had a computing-humanities sort of professor in our department. He taught a history of science class to the first years, and various ethics, human interface, organisation theory and information theory courses in later years in the degree.
I think a history-and-philosophy-of-science section has a place in the science curriculum, and could be taught by the science teachers. It would just need to be clear when the humanities-of-science was being taught, and when actual science-science was being taught.
My own degree course was in computer science, and we had a computing-humanities sort of professor in our department. He taught a history of science class to the first years, and various ethics, human interface, organisation theory and information theory courses in later years in the degree.
I think a history-and-philosophy-of-science section has a place in the science curriculum, and could be taught by the science teachers. It would just need to be clear when the humanities-of-science was being taught, and when actual science-science was being taught.
Comment