Mundó Blanch, Jordi2015-11-052015-11-0520141133-5165https://hdl.handle.net/2445/67656Maxwell's contribution to unification of electricity, magnetism and optics completely changed nineteenth-century physics, and its recategorization set the bases for the twentieth-century physics revolution. Modern social science is a fragmented field, characterized both by a poor integration between the concepts of economics, sociology, anthropology, psychology and history, and for a striking isolation from natural science. This article will explore the importance of incorporating to social science the methodological criteria of Maxwell's own conception in favor of a non-reductionist wide-ranging causal and conceptual integration between social science and natural science.23 p.application/pdfspa(c) Mundó Blanch, Jordi, 2014Filosofia de la ciènciaEquacions de MaxwellReduccionismeFísicaPhilosophy of scienceMaxwell equationsReductionismPhysicsLa unificación de la física de Maxwell y su idea de 'fertilización mutua de las ciencias' como desiderata metodológicos no reduccionistas para la ciencia socialinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article6477992015-11-05info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess