Science under Control
The greatest ambition of any moderately successful nineteenth-century French scientist was to become a member of the Academy of Sciences. Science under Control is the first major study, in any language, of this elite institution, in a period which began with such influential figures as Laplace and Cuvier and extended to the time of Louis Pasteur and Henri Poincare. The book attempts to remove the veil of mystery and misunderstanding which has shrouded this key institution and its procedures. The French government exercised political, financial and bureaucratic control over the Academy, and the Academy in turn sat in judgement over all serious scientific production. Only with its approval could the work of French scientists win acceptance and their careers advance. The book provides a case study of carefully regulated scientific production encouraged yet constrained within a system of reports, prizes and elections.
Product details
March 1992Hardback
9780521413732
474 pages
256 × 181 × 32 mm
0.992kg
20 b/w illus.
Out of stock in print form with no current plan to reprint
Table of Contents
- 1. Science in France
- 2. The structure of the Academy
- 3. The functioning of the Academy: some possible roles
- 4. Science divided: the sections
- 5. The Academicians
- 6. Elections: 'green fever'
- 7. Registration, judgement and reward
- 8. The printed word
- 9. The Academy under Government control
- 10. Outsiders: the scientific fringe and the public
- 11. The international context
- 12. The control of the Academy of Science.