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  1. Orientations and Disorientations in the History of Science How Measures Made a Difference at the Imperial Meridian.Simon Schaffer - 2022 - Centaurus 64 (4):829-856.
    Historians of the sciences have paid great attention to the ways that faith in what has been called the quantitative spirit emerged as a dominant feature of the politics of science, a theme of obvious salience in current epidemiological and climate crises. There are instructive connexions between measurement practices and orientation towards other cultures—as though scientific modernity somehow appeared through the primacy of robust quantification over subaltern, past, and exotic worlds, where merely provisional judgment allegedly still operated. This highly simplistic (...)
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  • Old and New Perspectives on the Nature/Culture Opposition in Biology and Anthropology.Gláucia Silva - 2021 - Biosemiotics 14 (2):459-478.
    The article explores a change taking place today in the fields of biology and social anthropology, signaling a shared desire to transcend the heuristic effects of the opposition between nature and culture. Acceptance of the idea that random mutations are the sole driving force behind the process of natural selection overlooks the agentive capacity of non-human living beings, revealing an anthropocentric inspiration. To critique the rhetoric surrounding the principle of natural selection, I turn to the anthropology of Tim Ingold and (...)
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  • Sociologie de la science et relativisme.Benjamin Matalon - 1986 - Revue de Synthèse 107 (3):267-290.
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  • The pragmatics of expertise.Vinciane Despret & Jocelyne Porcher - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (2):91-99.
    :This chapter from Vinciane Despret's book Être bête underscores the methodological considerations for the work as a whole, setting out a model for further ethological studies of farm animals. Or rather, with farm animals and with their farmers, because this pragmatic sociology is conscious of elaborating its knowledges and competences as it goes along. Neither the farmers’ knowledges nor the researchers’ theories are prioritized, but are mutually adjusted in a self-reflexive manner that seeks eventually to highlight the competences of animals (...)
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  • We are not so stupid … animals neither.Vinciane Despret - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (2):153-161.
    In her scrutiny of the discipline of ethology, psychologist and philosopher Vinciane Despret is no respecter of disciplinary limits, species borders, nodes of prestige, impact factor, pre-existing truths and facts, or Western science's exclusive authority. Instead, she seeks out unanticipated communicatory modes and dialogic mixes – highlow, inout, natureculture. Her reach and popularity as a Belgian and French intellectual thus extend well beyond her formal citation index. The translation below surveys her five-minute segment on the radio show Bon week-end, which (...)
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  • Robert Harvey. Sharing Common Ground: A Space for Ethics. New York: Bloomsbury, 2017. 304 pp. [REVIEW]Jeanne Etelain - 2019 - Critical Inquiry 45 (2):553-556.
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