𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Epistemic Cultures: How the Sciences Make Knowledge

✍ Scribed by Karin Knorr Cetina


Publisher
Harvard University Press
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Leaves
340
Edition
1st
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


How does science create knowledge? Epistemic cultures, shaped by affinity, necessity, and historical coincidence, determine how we know what we know. In this book, Karin Knorr Cetina compares two of the most important and intriguing epistemic cultures of our day, those in high energy physics and molecular biology. Her work highlights the diversity of these cultures of knowing and, in its depiction of their differences--in the meaning of the empirical, the enactment of object relations, and the fashioning of social relations--challenges the accepted view of a unified science.

By many accounts, contemporary Western societies are becoming "knowledge societies"--which run on expert processes and expert systems epitomized by science and structured into all areas of social life. By looking at epistemic cultures in two sample cases, this book addresses pressing questions about how such expert systems and processes work, what principles inform their cognitive and procedural orientations, and whether their organization, structures, and operations can be extended to other forms of social order.

The first ethnographic study to systematically compare two different scientific laboratory cultures, this book sharpens our focus on epistemic cultures as the basis of the knowledge society.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Epistemic Cultures: How the Sciences Mak
✍ Karin Knorr Cetina πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2022 πŸ› Harvard University Press 🌐 English

<p>How does science create knowledge? Epistemic cultures, shaped by affinity, necessity, and historical coincidence, determine how we know what we know. In this book, Karin Knorr Cetina compares two of the most important and intriguing epistemic cultures of our day, those in high energy physics and

Cultures without Culturalism: The Making
✍ Karine Chemla (editor); Evelyn Fox Keller (editor) πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2017 πŸ› Duke University Press 🌐 English

<div>This volume models a new path where historicized and cultural accounts of scientific practice retain their specificity and complexity without falling into the traps of cultural essentialism, examining issues that range from the history of quadratic equations in China to the studying of emplo

Cultures without Culturalism: The Making
✍ Karine Chemla, Evelyn Fox Keller (eds.) πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2017 πŸ› Duke University Press 🌐 English

<div>Cultural accounts of scientific ideas and practices have increasingly come to be welcomed as a corrective to previousβ€”and still widely heldβ€”theories of scientific knowledge and practices as universal. The editors caution, however, against the temptation to overgeneralize the work of culture, an

Making 20th Century Science: How Theorie
✍ Stephen G. Brush πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2015 πŸ› Oxford University Press 🌐 English

Historically, the scientific method has been said to require proposing a theory, making a prediction of something not already known, testing the prediction, and giving up the theory (or substantially changing it) if it fails the test. A theory that leads to several successful predictions is more li

Performance Cultures as Epistemic Cultur
✍ Erika Fischer-Lichte (editor), Torsten Jost (editor), Milos Kosic (editor), Astr πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2023 πŸ› Routledge 🌐 English

<p><span>This volume investigates performances as situated "machineries of knowing" (Karin Knorr Cetina), exploring them as relational processes for, in and with which performers as well as spectators actively (re)generate diverse practices of knowing, knowledges and epistemologies.</span></p><p></p