Science in Action
豆瓣
How to Follow Scientists and Engineers Through Society
Bruno Latour
简介
Science and technology have immense authority and influence in our society, yet their working remains little understood. The conventional perception of science in Western societies has been modified in recent years by the work of philosophers, sociologists and historians of science. In this book Bruno Latour brings together these different approaches to provide a lively and challenging analysis of science, demonstrating how social context and technical content are both essential to a proper understanding of scientific activity. Emphasizing that science can only be understood through its practice, the author examines science and technology in action: the role of scientific literature, the activities of laboratories, the institutional context of science in the modern world, and the means by which inventions and discoveries become accepted. From the study of scientific practice he develops an analysis of science as the building of networks. Throughout, Bruno Latour shows how a lively and realistic picture of science in action alters our conception of not only the natural sciences but also the social sciences and the sociology of knowledge in general. This stimulating book, drawing on a wealth of examples from a wide range of scientific activities, will interest all philosophers, sociologists and historians of science, scientists and engineers, and students of the philosophy of social science and the sociology of knowledge.
contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Opening Pandora’s Black Box
I. From Wearer to Stronger Rhetoric
1: Literature
A: Controversies
B: When controversies flare up the literature becomes technical
C: Writing texts that withstand the assaults of a hostile environment
Conclusion: Numbers, more numbers
2: Laboratories
A: From texts to things: A showdown
B: Building up counter-laboratories
C: Appealing (to) nature
II. From Wear Points to Strongholds
3: Machines
Introduction: The quandary of the fact-builder
A: Translating interests
B: Keeping the interested groups in line
C: The model of diffusion versus the model of translation
4: Insiders Out
A: Interesting others in the laboratories
B: Counting allies and resources
III. From Short to Longer Networks
5: Tribunals of Reason
A: The trials of rationality
B: Sociologics
C: Who needs hard facts?
6: Centres of Calculation
Prologue: The domestication of the savage mind
A: Action at a distance
B: Centres of calculation
C: Metrologies
Appendix 1: Rules of Method
Appendix 2: Principles
Notes
References
Index