New Frontiers in Science and Technology StudiesPolity Press, 2007 M10 1 - 240 pages Steve Fuller has a reputation for setting the terms of debate within science and technology studies. In his latest book, New Frontiers in Science and Technology Studies he charts the debates likely to be of relevance in the coming years.
These questions are explored by examining an array of historical, philosophical and contemporary sources. Attention is paid, for example, to the Bruno Latour's The Politics of Nature as a model for science policy, as well as the global controversy surrounding Bjorn Lomborg's The Sceptical Environmentalist, which led to the dismantling and re-establishment of the Danish national research ethics board. New Frontiers in Science and Technology Studies will appeal strongly to scholars and advanced undergraduate and graduate students in courses concerned with the social dimensions of science and technology, and anyone who cares about the future of science. |
From inside the book
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Page 30
... philosophers of science , because of their own " under- laboring " attitudes to the scientific orthodoxy , may be especially insensitive to Wilson's revolutionary project of reconfiguring the rela- tionship between the biological and ...
... philosophers of science , because of their own " under- laboring " attitudes to the scientific orthodoxy , may be especially insensitive to Wilson's revolutionary project of reconfiguring the rela- tionship between the biological and ...
Page 66
... philosopher , Ian Hacking , who came to the disunity thesis as an early Anglophone interpreter of Michel Foucault ( e.g. ... philosophers would reduce all sciences to human sciences , whereas scientists would have them reduced to natural ...
... philosopher , Ian Hacking , who came to the disunity thesis as an early Anglophone interpreter of Michel Foucault ( e.g. ... philosophers would reduce all sciences to human sciences , whereas scientists would have them reduced to natural ...
Page 213
... Philosophers wrote as if scientists were trying to live up to their nor- mative ideals , even though the philosophers themselves could not agree on what those ideals were . STS showed that philosophers suffered less from bad faith than ...
... Philosophers wrote as if scientists were trying to live up to their nor- mative ideals , even though the philosophers themselves could not agree on what those ideals were . STS showed that philosophers suffered less from bad faith than ...
Contents
List of Tables and Boxes | 1 |
Sciences Need for Unity | 53 |
Contrasting Visions | 85 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
20th century academic autonomy Bateson believe biology Bruno Latour called Cold War common conception constitution constructivist context contrast criticism culture Da Vinci Code demarcation problem disciplines distinction disunificationists E. O. Wilson economic emergence empirical Enlightenment environment epistemic epistemic justice fraud Friedrich Hayek Fuller Galileo Galison genetic global history of science human idea ideological individuals inquiry instantiationist intellectual interests Karl Popper knowledge claims Kuhn Kuhn's language Latour least logical positivism logical positivists Lomborg matter metaphysical modern Mooney normative open society organisms original paradigm peer review perhaps philosophers philosophy of science physical Popper positivism postmodern potential practice principle radical realist reality realized reductionism regime republican research ethics rhetoric science policy science's Scientific Revolution scientists secular sense simply social engineering social epistemology social science sociology specific standpoint strategy theory tion today's turn ultimate unification unified unity of science whereas whereby