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Epistemic cultures: how the sciences make knowledge

Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press (1999)

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  1. To obey and to tell. Foucault, Michel, On the Government of the Living: Lectures at the Collège de France 1979–1980. Basingstoke, Hants: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014. xviii + 365 pp. ISBN: 978-1403986627. £25.00. [REVIEW]Greg Hollin - 2016 - History of the Human Sciences 29 (1):123-127.
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  • Animated Corpses: Communicating with Post Mortals in an Anatomical Exhibition.Stefan Hirschauer - 2006 - Body and Society 12 (4):25-52.
    ‘Plastinates’ (i.e. corpses conserved through plastics) are lab created artifacts which since the nineties have been the subject of a cultural field experiment via an anatomical exhibition. Similarly to brain-dead or digitalized bodies, they constitute an ambiguous form of post-mortem existence. The article inquires after the ways in which the ontological status of these entities is constituted through the practices of body donors, anatomists and visitors. Plastinates owe their ambiguity to an oscillation between two different frames of perception. Their meaning (...)
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  • Transforming trash to treasure Cultural ambiguity in foetal cell research.Kristofer Hansson, Håkan Widner, Åsa Mäkitalo, Susanne Lundin & Andréa Wiszmeg - 2021 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 16 (1):1-12.
    BackgroundRich in different kind of potent cells, embryos are used in modern regenerative medicine and research. Neurobiologists today are pushing the boundaries for what can be done with embryos existing in the transitory margins of medicine. Therefore, there is a growing need to develop conceptual frameworks for interpreting the transformative cultural, biological and technical processes involving these aborted, donated and marginal embryos. This article is a contribution to this development of frameworks.MethodsThis article examines different emotional, cognitive and discursive strategies used (...)
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  • Book Review: The Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies Reader. [REVIEW]Ricardo Sánchez Cárdenas & Margarita S. Rayzberg - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (1):150-153.
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  • Making sense of algorithms: Relational perception of contact tracing and risk assessment during COVID-19.Ross Graham & Chuncheng Liu - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (1).
    Governments and citizens of nearly every nation have been compelled to respond to COVID-19. Many measures have been adopted, including contact tracing and risk assessment algorithms, whereby citizen whereabouts are monitored to trace contact with other infectious individuals in order to generate a risk status via algorithmic evaluation. Based on 38 in-depth interviews, we investigate how people make sense of Health Code, the Chinese contact tracing and risk assessment algorithmic sociotechnical assemblage. We probe how people accept or resist Health Code (...)
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  • Problem of Social Responsibility of Laboratory Sciences.Marek Sikora - 2022 - Ruch Filozoficzny 77 (4):133-151.
    The classic approach to science is dominated by the belief that science is a form of cognitive activity that focuses on constructing theories to describe and explain the phenomena and processes found in the world. Due to the fulfilment of the criteria of intersubjective communicability and controllability, theories are considered to be objective products of research activity that do not bear social responsibility for their applications. In this paper, the issue of social responsibility of science is addressed both from the (...)
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  • Air Pollution in the Making: Multiplicity and Difference in Interdisciplinary Data Practices.Emma Garnett - 2017 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 42 (5):901-924.
    This article traces an emergent tension in an interdisciplinary public health project called Weather Health and Air Pollution. The tension centered on two different kinds of data of air pollution: monitored and modeled data. Starting out with monitoring and modeling practices, the different ways in which they enacted air pollution are detailed. This multiplicity was problematic for the WHAP scientists, who were intent on working across disciplines, an initiative driven primarily by the epidemiologists who imbued the project with meaning and (...)
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  • Book Review: Timothy Kuhn, Karen Lee Ashcraft and Francois Cooren, The Work of Communication: Relational Perspectives on Working and Organizing in Contemporary Capitalism. [REVIEW]Mariaelena Bartesaghi - 2020 - Discourse and Communication 14 (3):332-335.
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  • Intervals and ratios: the invariantive transformations of Stanley Smith Stevens.George Matheson - 2006 - History of the Human Sciences 19 (3):65-81.
    Of S. S. Stevens's well-known classification of nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio ‘scales of measurement’, perhaps its least-known aspect is its most distinctive, namely the distinction between interval and ratio scales. This article investigates the circumstances of the typology's origins among the experimental psychologists at Harvard in the 1930s and the unique fusion of personal, technical and intellectual forces this setting represented. It shows how it came to be that an influential psychologist reconceptualized measurement from first principles in such a (...)
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  • The plurality of assumptions about fossils and time.Caitlin Donahue Wylie - 2019 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 41 (2):21.
    A research community must share assumptions, such as about accepted knowledge, appropriate research practices, and good evidence. However, community members also hold some divergent assumptions, which they—and we, as analysts of science—tend to overlook. Communities with different assumed values, knowledge, and goals must negotiate to achieve compromises that make their conflicting goals complementary. This negotiation guards against the extremes of each group’s desired outcomes, which, if achieved, would make other groups’ goals impossible. I argue that this diversity, as a form (...)
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  • Indestructible plastic: the neuroscience of the new aging brain.Constance Holman & Etienne de Villers-Sidani - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
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  • Science, Society and the University: A Paradox of Values.Beth Perry 1 - 2006 - Social Epistemology 20 (3):201-219.
    The existence of conflicting messages on the role and status of the university is linked to a wider paradox of values about science in society. Value is attributed to science and assumed by the university in the context of the move to knowledge‐based economies and societies, yet this has not been accompanied by a systematic and balanced debate about the values that should underpin socio‐economic change. Questions are then raised about both the effectiveness of public policy and the role of (...)
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  • Data and Model Operations in Computational Sciences: The Examples of Computational Embryology and Epidemiology.Fabrizio Li Vigni - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (4):696-731.
    Computer models and simulations have become, since the 1960s, an essential instrument for scientific inquiry and political decision making in several fields, from climate to life and social sciences. Philosophical reflection has mainly focused on the ontological status of the computational modeling, on its epistemological validity and on the research practices it entails. But in computational sciences, the work on models and simulations are only two steps of a longer and richer process where operations on data are as important as, (...)
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  • Making Meaning Out of Human/animal: Scientific Competition of Classifications in the Spanish Legislature.Ross Mitchell - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (3):205-213.
    In the summer of 2008, the Spanish legislature resolved to grant great apes (though not all simians) basic human rights. While the decision to grant such rights came about largely through the lobbying efforts of the Great Ape Project (GAP), the decision has potential reverberations throughout the scientific world and beyond in its implications for shaping determinations of “what is human.” Such implications do not appear to be lost on various groupings of scientists who have spoken about their opinions about (...)
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  • The Body and the Production of Phenomena in the Science Laboratory.Liv Kondrup Hardahl, Per-Olof Wickman & Cecilia Caiman - 2019 - Science & Education 28 (8):865-895.
    This article deals with science content “in the making” and in particular the role of the body in producing scientific phenomena. While accounts of scientists’ work have repeatedly demonstrated, how producing phenomena requires immense amounts of time and effort, involving tinkering and manual labor, this is a little empirically studied content in science education. Seeking to shed light on how the body is involved with materiality to produce physics phenomena, and in what terms this is learning physics content, the article (...)
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  • Morality in Scientific Practice: The Relevance and Risks of Situated Scientific Knowledge in Application-Oriented Social Research.Letizia Caronia & André H. Caron - 2019 - Human Studies 42 (3):451-481.
    After decades of epistemological inquiry on the social construction of science, we have observed a renewed consensus on empiricism in application-oriented social sciences and a growing trust in evidence-based practice and decision-making. Drawing on the long-standing debate on value-ladenness, evidence and normativity in sciences, this article theoretically discusses and empirically illustrates the Life-World origins of methods in a domain of inquiry strongly characterized by an empiricist epistemic culture and a normative stance: Children and Media Studies. Adopting a reflexive approach to (...)
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  • The SENSE of Nuclear Physics: New Frontiers, Media, and Collaborations.J. Scott Brennen - 2018 - Science in Context 31 (4):501-520.
    ArgumentThis article describes the efforts of one fifty-year-old nuclear physics research center to stay relevant as the boundaries of nuclear physics have expanded and distributed collaborations have become increasingly common. In adapting to these shifts, SENSE, a university-based institute in the United States, has seen notable changes in power relations, forms of legitimation, and social structures. This article recognizes and investigates these changes through an interpretative investigation of four common media objects incorporated into research practice at the institute: collaboration wikis, (...)
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  • Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration and Scholarly Independence in Multidisciplinary Learning Environments at Doctoral Level and Beyond.Eva M. Brodin & Helen Avery - 2020 - Minerva 58 (3):409-433.
    The aim of this study is to investigate how patterns of collaboration and scholarly independence are related to early stage researchers’ development in two multidisciplinary learning environments at a Swedish university. Based on interviews with leaders, supervisors, doctoral students, and post docs, results show how early stage researchers’ development is conditioned by their relative positions in time and space. Through the theoretical notions of ‘epistemic living space’ and ‘developmental networks’, four ways of experiencing the multidisciplinary learning environment were distinguished. Overall, (...)
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  • The Appropriation of Ideas, Theories, Concepts and Models by Management Practitioners.Laurence Robinson - 2010 - Dissertation, Coventry University
    During the second half of the 20th century there has been both a burgeoning intellectual interest in business and management as a topic and an exponential growth in the formal study of business and management as an academic subject. Indeed by the end of the century it was estimated that worldwide there were 8,000 business schools and more than 13 million students of business and management. In addition, it was estimated that worldwide annual expenditure on university level business and management (...)
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  • Action in the Space Between: From Latent to Active Boundaries.Elina I. Mäkinen - 2018 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 43 (2):349-374.
    Boundaries have gained analytical prominence in sociology of science. Notably, there have been studies on how academics differentiate themselves from outsiders in order to secure their legitimacy. In university departments, scholars engage in boundary work to defend their intellectual communities and institutional resources. While boundary struggles are characteristic of academia, they rarely result in departmental restructuring. This article examines a case where a theoretical divide between social and cultural anthropologists and biological anthropologists led to a departmental split. The study reveals (...)
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