Feyerabend was probably the first philosopher of science who really stated 
that science as it is practised by scientists themselves is NOT an 
enterprise which can be strictly constructed or even fully described in any 
conventional methodical way such as the philosophies of positivism and even 
rationality or idealism for that matter propose. As is true for any human 
enterprise, no matter how strongly this is denied by the popular science 
press, it is, as Feyerabend puts it, an anarchic enterprise, this does not 
mean random chaos or a process with no order rather he refers to the fact 
that scientists just as authors of great literature or poets, pursue their 
subject via many paths rather than the strict methodologies which are 
supposed to define science, in fact these methodologies fail to be 
`...capable of accounting for such a maze of interactions'. Einstein is 
noted as saying that `The external conditions which are set for the 
scientist by the facts of experience do not permit him to let himself be 
too much restricted, in the construction of his conceptual world, by the 
adherence to an epistemological system'. Feyerabend goes on to say that 
`The attempt...to discover the secrets of nature and of man, entails, 
therefore, the rejection of all universal standards and of all rigid 
traditions.'

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