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Research in Sports Medicine
An International Journal
Volume 22, 2014 - Issue 3
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Short Communication

A Consideration of the Paradigm of Exercise Physiology

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Pages 314-322 | Received 19 Dec 2013, Accepted 16 Feb 2014, Published online: 20 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

Exercise physiology, in terms of the history of biological sciences, is quite young and has a rather tumultuous history – as it spans physical education, health & medicine, sport science, and biology. This has led to the development of differing definitions, research approaches, practices and goals. This is easily seen in the presence of competing and non-universally adopted definitions of fitness. Such internal inconsistencies portray to the outside world a discipline experiencing the problems associated with a changing paradigm. Every science requires the presence of a paradigm that both describes and guides the evolution of thinking, experimentation, and the application of such. It is argued here that exercise physiology has been operating without benefit of a satisfactory and relevant paradigm. A further proposition is that the required disciplinary definitions derived from an articulated paradigm are also absent. A paradigmatic scheme based on biological dogma is presented along with proposed definitions.

Thanks to Russell Hadley for his initiation of the discussion of Kuhn’s model of paradigm change.

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