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  1. Challenges for ‘Community’ in Science and Values: Cases from Robotics Research.Charles H. Pence & Daniel J. Hicks - 2023 - Humana.Mente Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (44):1-32.
    Philosophers of science often make reference — whether tacitly or explicitly — to the notion of a scientific community. Sometimes, such references are useful to make our object of analysis tractable in the philosophy of science. For others, tracking or understanding particular features of the development of science proves to be tied to notions of a scientific community either as a target of theoretical or social intervention. We argue that the structure of contemporary scientific research poses two unappreciated, or at (...)
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  • Organizational and geopolitical approaches to international science and technology networks.Wesley Shrum & Carl Bankston - 1993 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 6 (3-4):119-133.
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  • Scientific culture, multiculturalism and the science classroom.Eva Krugly-Smolska - 1996 - Science & Education 5 (1):21-29.
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  • Immiseration of industrial scientists in corporate laboratories in the United States.Roli Varma & Richard Worthington - 1995 - Minerva 33 (4):325-338.
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  • Towards a Sociology of Translation: Book Translations as a Cultural World-System.Johan Heilbron - 1999 - European Journal of Social Theory 2 (4):429-444.
    This article argues that the translation of books may be fruitfully understood as constituting a cultural world-system. The working of this system, based on a core-periphery structure, accounts for the uneven flows of translations between language groups as well as for the varying role of translations within language groups. The final part outlines how this general sociological model may be further developed.
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  • Two kinds of globality: a comparison of Fritz Jahr and Van Rensselaer Potter's bioethics.A. Muzur & I. Rinčić - 2015 - Global Bioethics 26 (1):23-27.
    Today, it is widely accepted that the first to conceive the term and the discipline of bioethics was the German theologian and teacher Fritz Jahr from the city of Halle. Without knowing Jahr's ideas, the American oncologist Van Rensselaer Potter from Madison, Wisconsin, invented the notion of bioethics which, unlike in the case of Fritz Jahr, had a deep impact and spread all over the world. Although Jahr's bioethics somehow differed from that of Potter, they did share many crucial aspects, (...)
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