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Why Mark Zuckerberg wants everyone to read this landmark philosophy book from the 1960s

Why Mark Zuckerberg wants everyone to read this landmark philosophy book from the 1960s
Strategy2 min read

mark zuckerberg the structure of scientific revolutions

Steve Jennings/Getty; Amazon

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is diving into Thomas Kuhn's influential philosophical text.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's resolution for 2015 was to read a new book every two weeks and discuss it with the Facebook community.

He's developed a book club that's heavy on big ideas, and his sixth pick is no different.

For his most recent selection in "A Year in Books," Zuckerberg has chosen the late physicist Thomas Kuhn's philosophical treatise "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions."

Since its initial publication in 1962, it has become "one of the most cited academic books of all time," establishing Kuhn as "perhaps the most influential" philosophers of science in the 20th century, according to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Kuhn's book may be most remembered for introducing the phrase "paradigm shift," representing instances in scientific history when a perspective was fundamentally shifted, like when quantum physics replaced Newtonian mechanics.

Zuckerberg explains his latest pick on his personal Facebook page:

It's a history of science book that explores the question of whether science and technology make consistent forward progress or whether progress comes in bursts related to other social forces.

I tend to think that science is a consistent force for good in the world. I think we'd all be better off if we invested more in science and acted on the results of research. I'm excited to explore this theme further.

If there was ever a philosophy book to read by a physicist, it's probably "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions."

"The real measure of Kuhn's importance ... lies not in the infectiousness of one of his concepts but in the fact that he single-handedly changed the way we think about mankind's most organized attempt to understand the world," John Naughton writes for The Guardian.

"A Year in Books" so far:

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