Scientific Authority & Twentieth-century AmericaRonald G. Walters Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 - 271 lappuses Writing from a variety of perspectives - intellectual history, social history, feminist theory, philosophy, medical history, political theory, and visual analysis - the authors demonstrate that science no longer belongs exclusively to its practitioners or to any particular discipline. Situating science within other communities of discourse, they show how scientific language and metaphor spread outward into new realms, including popular culture, where they came into conflict with other languages of authority. They also show how medical authority shapes social behavior, how corporate agricultural science has displaced farmers' knowledge, and how popular science enters the collective imagination. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 60.
32. lappuse
... knowledge over the past twenty years , such cross - disciplinary study has become a more radical enter- prise . In the 1960s and 1970s , a powerful critique of the academic disciplines that was mounted from the political left questioned ...
... knowledge over the past twenty years , such cross - disciplinary study has become a more radical enter- prise . In the 1960s and 1970s , a powerful critique of the academic disciplines that was mounted from the political left questioned ...
110. lappuse
... knowledge is not as legitimate or as acceptable as men's knowledge . She proposes instead that a mother " engages in a discipline " just as systematic as the pursuit of medicine or law , that rea- son is an essential component of a ...
... knowledge is not as legitimate or as acceptable as men's knowledge . She proposes instead that a mother " engages in a discipline " just as systematic as the pursuit of medicine or law , that rea- son is an essential component of a ...
192. lappuse
... knowledge , theories of language , and ultimately the entire conception of a systematic philosophy devoted to finding founda- tions for objective knowledge rest on misconceptions . Because we make up the questions we ask , Rorty argues ...
... knowledge , theories of language , and ultimately the entire conception of a systematic philosophy devoted to finding founda- tions for objective knowledge rest on misconceptions . Because we make up the questions we ask , Rorty argues ...
Saturs
Uncertainty Science and Reform | 1 |
Voices of Authority11 | 11 |
A Historians View of American Social Science | 32 |
Autortiesības | |
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advertising agricultural Allen and Company American exceptionalism American History American social argued behavior Blackwell Cambridge Carousel of Progress Charles Charles Kettering Chicago claims communities contemporary corporate critics cultural David Hollinger decades Dewey disease economic effort Elizabeth Blackwell ence England Farmer EPCOT essay ethnic ethnos example exhibits Experiment Station farm feminist Futurama future garden gates germ theory Habermas historians historicism historicist House of Magic human hygienic ideal immigration individual industrial intellectual JoAnne Brown Jürgen Habermas Kettering knowledge laboratory Ladies Home Journal liberal Lysol machines metaphor modern moral Motors nature nineteenth century Parade of Progress perspective Philosophy physicians pluggers police Political Theory popular postethnic practice pragmatic problems public health reform Richard Rorty role Rorty's scientific scientism soap social science social scientists society Solidarity tion tradition Tuberculosis twentieth USDA Walter Walter Dorwin Teague wheel hoe women World's Fair York