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E-grāmata: Technicity vs Scientificity - Complementarities and Rivalries: Complementarities and Rivalries [Wiley Online]

  • Formāts: 240 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119406242
  • ISBN-13: 9781119406242
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Wiley Online
  • Cena: 168,05 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Formāts: 240 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119406242
  • ISBN-13: 9781119406242
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

The relationship between technicity and scientificity is often overlooked or avoided despite being a determining factor for establishing interdisciplinarity. By focusing on this relationship and highlighting a number of its ramifications, this book sheds light on the hidden or skewed stakes that condition a wide array of scientific projects. 

The authors present different approaches based on their own professional experience, focusing on the technique–science relationship in domains as diverse as brain mapping, the decipherment of Mycenaean writing and the design process. Each chapter presents varying and often opposing epistemological conclusions to provide the reader with a wide breadth of examples in different fields.

Although the scope of this book is far from exhaustive, it serves as a starting point for the necessary and long-overdue clarification of the relationship between these neighboring, yet disjointed, sectors.

Introduction ix
Chapter 1 The Artisan, the Sage and the Irony: An Outline of Knowledge Sociogenesis
1(56)
Georges Guille-Escuret
1.1 Knowledge sociogenesis? Necessary introduction
2(6)
1.1.1 Evolution, history and conjecture: Radcliffe-Brown's block
3(2)
1.1.2 Techniques outside science, science outside techniques
5(3)
1.2 Extra-human or peri-human technicities
8(3)
1.2.1 Involuntary society and impersonal knowledge: termite mound and workers
8(2)
1.2.2 Techniques and culture in chimpanzees
10(1)
1.3 Junctions, divergences and disparities
11(12)
1.3.1 Putting words to action?
12(5)
1.3.2 Diversity and disparity, conjunction and separation
17(6)
1.4 Forming a triangle: technique, science and ideology
23(15)
1.4.1 Astronomers and architects, priests and administrators
25(5)
1.4.2 Logic and theory without technique: first birth
30(4)
1.4.3 Science thanks to techniques: second birth
34(4)
1.5 The abandoned mystery: "technicity"
38(9)
1.5.1 Immediate markers of technicity
40(4)
1.5.2 Technicity, scientificity and ideology: the distinction of functions with overlapping roles
44(3)
1.6 Technocracy and scientificity
47(7)
1.6.1 Technocracy: two perspectives in the 1960s
48(3)
1.6.2 Technosciences: the example of molecular biology
51(3)
1.7 The wilting of science, for lack of dissidence
54(3)
Chapter 2 Technicization of the Neurosciences: Uses of Image-Processing Software in Brain Research
57(40)
Giulia Anichini
2.1 Setting the scene. Neuroanatomy: from scalpel to screen
59(3)
2.2 The categories challenged by practices
62(2)
2.3 Sulcal morphometry: between automation and scientific expertise
64(13)
2.3.1 Recovery and creation of "raw" data
64(2)
2.3.2 Production of the "mask"
66(2)
2.3.3 Choosing "normal" brain images
68(4)
2.3.4 Labeling the sulci
72(5)
2.4 Comparing brain networks: theory in database exploration
77(13)
2.4.1 Defining the variables and comparing the groups of images
81(6)
2.4.2 Data bricolage
87(3)
2.5 Conclusions
90(7)
Chapter 3 Cryptography, a Human Science? Models, Matrices, Tools and Frames of Reference
97(58)
Flavia Carraro
3.1 Decipherment between science and technique, discovery and invention
98(8)
3.1.1 Cryptographies between war and peace
99(4)
3.1.2 An exemplary case: the decipherment of Linear B
103(3)
3.2 The decipherer, the result and the procedure: the impossible solution and the technical compromise
106(6)
3.3 The Grid, tool, instrument and machine, and the regime of proofs and tests
112(8)
3.4 An applied and interdisciplinary internal and collective analysis
120(9)
3.5 The patterns and mechanics of the documents
129(9)
3.6 Scribes' hands and autopsy of the tablets
138(6)
3.7 Technomycenology
144(11)
3.7.1 Cuts of pertinence and relays, frames of reference and hierarchies
145(4)
3.7.2 Prince Charming and the scribe of Minos
149(6)
Chapter 4 The Beauty of Equation: The Anthropologist and the Engineer in Design Processes
155(24)
Philippe Geslin
4.1 The "beauty of equation"
160(3)
4.2 Eleven outlines for the harmony of the equation
163(13)
4.2.1 First outline: the circulation of technical objects orients future uses
163(1)
4.2.2 Second outline: circulation can correct the "mistakes" or lack of a design process
164(1)
4.2.3 Third outline: circulation can encourage certain material, but also discursive expansions
165(1)
4.2.4 Fourth outline: circulation determines regimes of familiarity and temporality that summarize technological standardization. They can, in certain cases, contribute to the birth of technoscapes
166(2)
4.2.5 Fifth outline: the experience of techniques is the knowledge that their deciders, or the public, have, and not necessarily those who directly use it
168(1)
4.2.6 Sixth outline: in the framework of circulating a technical object, it is always through the element that constitutes it and that is the most deterritorialized in relation to the context of receipt that specific forms of appropriation are noted
169(1)
4.2.7 Seventh outline: the choice of the name given to a technical object before projects may constrain the design processes and its appropriation mechanisms
170(1)
4.2.8 Eighth outline: the relationships between things are just as much the object of experiments as the things themselves
171(1)
4.2.9 Ninth outline: the imitation principle underlies the circulation of things and their "scale-up"
172(1)
4.2.10 Tenth outline: the proposed solutions are both the process that will lead to concrete transformations and its most visible results
173(2)
4.2.11 Eleventh outline: the implementation of the sociotechnical points of reference proposed by the anthropologist and their materialization favor "acting together" and "testing the sensitive"
175(1)
4.3 The blue note
176(3)
Conclusion 179(6)
Bibliography 185(18)
Index 203
Giulia Anichini, Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur la science et la technologie (CIRST), Canada

Flavia Carraro, Research Institute for the History of Technology and Science, Germany

Philippe Geslin, Neuchātel University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland

Georges Guille-Escuret, French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), France