Ahmad RazaAhmed F. Siddiqi2011-11-302011-11-302007Journal of History & Philosophy of Science, 13(1): 9-16, 2007https://escholar.umt.edu.pk/handle/123456789/351This paper makes a theoretical critique of the concept of scientific knowledge. The classical conception of scientific knowledge has been discussed and analyzed in the first section. In the second section, emerging conception of the scientific knowledge has been explored. The author hopes to show on the basis of veritable critique from different philosophers of science as well as scientist (Kuhn, 1967, Polanyi, 1983, Prigogine, 1984), that the structure of scientific knowledge, the way it is interpreted and legitimized, is not only shaped by the personal and cultural orientations of its practitioners but also by the larger cultural context, in which it is carried out.enTacit StructuresDissipative StructuresClassical ConceptionThe structure of scientific knowledgeArticle