Switch to: Citations

Add references

You must login to add references.
  1. Objectivity.Lorraine Daston & Peter Galison - 2007 - Cambridge, Mass.: Zone Books. Edited by Peter Galison.
    Objectivity has a history, and it is full of surprises. In Objectivity, Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison chart the emergence of objectivity in the mid-nineteenth-century sciences--and show how the concept differs from its alternatives, truth-to-nature and trained judgment. This is a story of lofty epistemic ideals fused with workaday practices in the making of scientific images. From the eighteenth through the early twenty-first centuries, the images that reveal the deepest commitments of the empirical sciences--from anatomy to crystallography--are those featured in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   324 citations  
  • Electricity as a Medium of Psychic Life: Electrotechnological Adventures into Psychodiagnosis in Weimar Germany.Cornelius Borck - 2001 - Science in Context 14 (4).
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • The Human Motor: Energy, Fatigue, and the Origins of Modernity.Anson Rabinbach - 1992 - University of California Press.
    Science once had an unshakable faith in its ability to bring the forces of nature—even human nature—under control. In this wide-ranging book Anson Rabinbach examines how developments in physics, biology, medicine, psychology, politics, and art employed the metaphor of the working body as a human motor. From nineteenth-century theories of thermodynamics and political economy to the twentieth-century ideals of Taylorism and Fordism, Rabinbach demonstrates how the utopian obsession with energy and fatigue shaped social thought across the ideological spectrum.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   51 citations  
  • Homo cerebralis: der Wandel vom Seelenorgan zum Gehirn.Michael Hagner - 2008
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   15 citations  
  • The New Phrenology: The Limits of Localizing Cognitive Processes in the Brain.William R. Uttal - 2001 - MIT Press.
    William Uttal is concerned that in an effort to prove itself a hard science, psychology may have thrown away one of its most important methodological tools—a critical analysis of the fundamental assumptions that underlie day-to-day empirical research. In this book Uttal addresses the question of localization: whether psychological processes can be defined and isolated in a way that permits them to be associated with particular brain regions. New, noninvasive imaging technologies allow us to observe the brain while it is actively (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   121 citations  
  • Mind Time: The Temporal Factor in Consciousness.Benjamin Libet - 2004 - Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
    Over a long career, Libet has conducted experiments that have shown, in clear and concrete ways, how the brain produces conscious awareness.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   108 citations  
  • Objectivity.Lorraine Daston - 2007 - Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press. Edited by Peter Galison.
    Prologue: objectivity shock -- Epistemologies of the eye -- Blind sight -- Collective empiricism -- Objectivity is new -- Histories of the scientific self -- Epistemic virtues -- The argument -- Objectivity in shirtsleeves -- Truth-to-nature -- Before objectivity -- Taming nature's variability -- The idea in the observation -- Four-eyed sight -- Drawing from nature -- Truth-to-nature after objectivity -- Mechanical objectivity -- Seeing clear -- Photography as science and art -- Automatic images and blind sight -- Drawing against (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   97 citations  
  • The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in Nineteenth-Century Britain.Roger Cooter - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (2):351-352.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   33 citations