Scientific Authority & Twentieth-century AmericaRonald G. Walters JHU Press, 1997 - 271 lappuses Turn-of-the-century Americans strongly believed that science -- "disinterested" and authoritative -- could help them to organize society and understand the natural world. Yet today, even scientists themselves are raising disturbing questions about the nature and practice of science. In Scientific Authority and Twentieth-Century America Ronald G. Walters brings together a distinguished group of contributors to reflect, often critically, on scientific and medical claims to moral, social, and political authority. 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. |
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Saturs
Uncertainty Science and Reform | 1 |
Voices of Authority11 | 11 |
A Historians View of American Social Science | 32 |
Medical Models | 51 |
Female Science and Medical Reform A Path Not Taken | 99 |
Selling Science | 117 |
Corporate Science on Display | 148 |
Closing the Circle | 183 |
Notes | 205 |
List of Contributors | 261 |
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