Making Natural Knowledge
In Making Natural Knowledge: Constructivism and the History of Science, Jan Golinski reviews recent writing on the history of science and shows how it has been dramatically reshaped by a new understanding of science itself. In the last few years, scientific knowledge has come to be seen as a product of human culture, an approach that has challenged the tradition of the history of science as a story of steady and autonomous progress. New topics have emerged in historical research, including: the identity of the scientist, the importance of the laboratory, the role of language and instruments, and the connections with other realms of culture and society. Golinski has written a sympathetic but critical survey of this exciting field of research, at a level that can be appreciated by students or anyone else who wants an introduction to contemporary thinking in the development of the sciences.
- First up-to-date, single-author survey of recent research and methodology in the history of science
- A critical discussion of the perspective that views sciences as a human construction and is accessible to undergraduate and general readers
- Counters recent attacks by Sokal and by Gross and Levitt on social construction of science
Reviews & endorsements
'… this book provide[s] a clear and illuminating brief account of this very recent tradition of the 'sociology of scientific knowledge'.' John Henry, Nature
Product details
May 1998Paperback
9780521449137
250 pages
229 × 153 × 19 mm
0.518kg
11 b/w illus.
Unavailable - out of print September 2004
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: challenges to the classical view of science
- 1. An outline of contructivism
- 2. Identity and discipline
- 3. The place of production
- 4. Speaking for nature
- 5. Interventions and representations
- 6. Culture and construction
- Bibliography.