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  1. A Night with Saturn.Greg Myers & Françoise Bastide - 1992 - Science, Technology and Human Values 17 (3):259-281.
    [Translator's]: The flight of Voyager 1 past Saturn in 1981 provides an occasion for a semiotic comparison of reports in French newspapers, a popular science article, and specialized scientific articles in Nature. The texts differ in the distance supposed between reader and writer, in the treatment of human and nonhuman actors, in characterization of the event and assumptions about readers' interest in it, and in their narrative structure. The analysis shows that popular izations and specialized scientific articles are not related (...)
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  • Boundary-Work and the Demarcation of Science from Non-science: Strains and Interests in Professional Ideologies of Scientists.Thomas F. Gieryn - 1983 - American Sociological Review 48 (6):781-795.
    The demarcation of science from other intellectual activities-long an analytic problem for philosophers and sociologists-is here examined as a practical problem for scientists. Construction of a boundary between science and varieties of non-science is useful for scientists' pursuit of professional goals: acquisition of intellectual authority and career opportunities; denial of these resources to "pseudoscientists"; and protection of the autonomy of scientific research from political interference. "Boundary-work" describes an ideological style found in scientists' attempts to create a public image for science (...)
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  • Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life.Steven Shapin & Simon Schaffer - 1985 - Princeton University Press.
    In a new introduction, the authors describe how science and its social context were understood when this book was first published, and how the study of the history of science has changed since then.
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  • The manufacture of knowledge: an essay on the constructivist and contextual nature of science.Karin Knorr-Cetina - 1981 - New York: Pergamon Press.
    The anthropological approach is the central focus of this study. Laboratories are looked upon with the innocent eye of the traveller in exotic lands, and the societies found in these places are observed with the objective yet compassionate eye of the visitor from a quite other cultural milieu. There are many surprises that await us if we enter a laboratory in this frame of mind... This study is a realistic enterprise, an attempt to truly represent the social order of life (...)
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  • The trouble with science.Robin Ian MacDonald Dunbar - 1996 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Science is not a great way to make money, or these days, even a job. But there are great riches in it, and in this book too. Tim Bradford, 'New Scientist'.
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  • Misunderstanding science?: the public reconstruction of science and technology.Alan Irwin & Brian Wynne (eds.) - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Misunderstanding Science? offers a challenging new perspective on the public understanding of science. In so doing, it also challenges existing ideas of the nature of science and its relationships with society. Its analysis and case presentation are highly relevant to current concerns over the uptake, authority, and effectiveness of science as expressed, for example, in areas such as education, medical/health practice, risk and the environment, technological innovation. Based on several in-depth case-studies, and informed theoretically by the sociology of scientific knowledge, (...)
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  • Science in action: how to follow scientists and engineers through society.Bruno Latour - 1987 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    In this book Bruno Latour brings together these different approaches to provide a lively and challenging analysis of science, demonstrating how social context..
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  • The Great Devonian Controversy: The Shaping of Scientific Knowledge among Gentlemanly Specialists.[author unknown] - 1985 - Journal of the History of Biology 19 (2):318-319.
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  • Essay Review: When Evolution Became Conversation: Vestiges of Creation, Its Readers, and Its Respondents in Victorian Britain. [REVIEW]James A. Secord & John M. Lynch - 2001 - Journal of the History of Biology 34 (3):565-579.
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  • Darwin's Metaphor: Nature's Place in Victorian Culture.Robert M. Young - 1985 - Journal of the History of Biology 20 (1):131-132.
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  • Corresponding interests: artisans and gentlemen in nineteenth-century natural history.Anne Secord - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (4):383-408.
    Early nineteenth-century natural history books reveal that British naturalists depended heavily on correspondence as a means for gathering information and specimens. Edward Newman commented in hisHistory of British Ferns: ‘Were I to make out a list ofallthe correspondents who have assisted me it would be wearisome from its length.’ Works such as William Withering'sBotanical Arrangementshow that artisans numbered among his correspondents. However, the literary products of scientific practice reveal little of the workings or such correspondences and how or why they (...)
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  • Separate Spheres and Public Places: Reflections on the History of Science Popularization and Science in Popular Culture.Roger Cooter & Stephen Pumfrey - 1994 - History of Science 32 (3):237-267.
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  • Science in the pub: artisan botanists in early nineteenth-century Lancashire.Anne Secord - 1994 - History of Science 32 (97):269-315.
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  • Laboratory Life. The Social Construction of Scientific Facts.Bruno Latour & Steve Woolgar - 1982 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 13 (1):166-170.
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  • The unnatural nature of science.Lewis Wolpert - 1992 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Shows that many of our understandings about scientific thought can be corrected once we realise just how unnatural science is. Quoting scientists from Aristotle to Einstein, the book argues that scientific ideas are, with rare exceptions, counter-intuitive and contrary to common sense.
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  • Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science.Donna J. Haraway - 1990 - Journal of the History of Biology 23 (2):329-333.
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  • Beamtimes and Lifetimes.Sharon Traweek (ed.) - 1988 - Harvard University Press.
    Particle physicists constitute a community of sophisticated mythmakers—explicators of the nature of matter who forever alter our views of space and time. But who are these people? What is their world really like? Traweek, a bold observer of culture, opens the door to this unusual domain and offers us a glimpse into the inner sanctum.
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  • Embodied Progress: A Cultural Account of Assisted Conception.Sarah Franklin - 1997 - Psychology Press.
    New reproductive technologies, such as in vitrio fertilization, have been the subject of intense public discussion and debate worldwide. In addition to difficult ethical, moral, personal and political questions, new technologies of assisted conception also raise novel socio-cultural dilemmas. How are parenthood, kinship and procreation being redefined in the context of new reproductive technologies? Has reproductive choice become part of consumer culture? Embodied Progress offers a unique perspective on these and other cultural dimensions of assisted conception techniques. Based on ethnographic (...)
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  • Scientific Discourse in Sociohistorical Context: The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1675-1975.Dwight Atkinson & Royal Society Britain) - 1999 - Routledge.
    Scientific Discourse in Sociohistorical Context represents the intersection of knowledge and method, examined from the perspective of three distinct disciplines: linguistics, rhetoric-composition, and history. Herein, Dwight Atkinson describes the written language and rhetoric of the Royal Society of London, based on his analysis of its affiliated journal, The Philosophical Transactions, starting with the 17th century advent of modern empirical science through to the present day. Atkinson adopts two independent approaches to the analysis of written discourse--from the fields of linguistics and (...)
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  • Jane Marcet and the limits to public science.Saba Bahar - 2001 - British Journal for the History of Science 34 (1):29-49.
    This essay examines Jane Marcet's 1806 Conversations on Chemistry in the context of a newly emerging ideology of science. As part of this emergence, a new public for chemistry had to be formed and clearly demarcated from that of ‘public men’ of science. Although this essay examines Marcet's relation to Humphry Davy's public lectures on chemistry, it focuses on the encouragement she received from the highly intellectual Geneva elite, to whom she was related. Comparing her work to the influential Bibliothèque (...)
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  • The Norton History of the Human Sciences.Roger Smith - 1997 - W. W. Norton & Company.
    A comprehensive history of the human sciences -- psychology, sociology, anthropology, economics, and political science -- from their precursors in early human culture to the present.This erudite yet accessible volume in Norton's highly praised History of Science series tracks the long and circuitous path by which human beings came to see themselves and their societies as scientific subjects like any other. Beginning with the Renaissance's rediscovery of Greek psychology, political philosophy, and ethics, Roger Smith recounts how the human sciences gradually (...)
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  • Science as Public Culture: Chemistry and Enlightenment in Britain, 1760-1820.Jan Golinski & Trevor H. Levere - 1994 - Annals of Science 51 (3):316-316.
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  • Natural Eloquence: Women Reinscribe Science.Barbara T. Gates - 1999 - Journal of the History of Biology 32 (2):411-413.
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  • Writing Biology: Texts in the Social Construction of Scientific Knowledge.Greg Myers - 1991 - Journal of the History of Biology 24 (3):521-527.
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  • Victorian Science in Context.Bernard Lightman - 1999 - Journal of the History of Biology 32 (3):575-577.
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  • Opening Pandora's Box. A sociological analysis of scientists' discourse.G. Nigel Gilbert & Michael Mulkay - 1985 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 175 (1):70-71.
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  • Fictions for Exposition.Greg Myers - 1992 - History of Science 30:221-47.
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