Instituting Science : The Cultural Production of Scientific Disciplines /
Early practitioners of the social studies of science turned their attention away from questions of institutionalization, which had tended to emphasize macrolevel explanations, and attended instead to microstudies of laboratory practice. Though sympathetic to this approach-as the microstudies include...
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Stanford, CA :
Stanford University Press,
[2022]
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Colección: | Writing Science
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Frontmatter
- Acknowledgments
- Contents
- Tables and Illustrations
- CHAPTER 1 Introduction
- CHAPTER 2 Practice, Reason, Context: The Dialogue Between Theory and Experiment
- CHAPTER 3 The Discipline of Nature and the Nature of Disciplines
- CHAPTER 4 Social Interests and the Organic Physics of 1847
- CHAPTER 5 Science for the Clinic: Science Policy and the Formation of Carl Ludwig's Institute in Leipzig
- CHAPTER 6 The Politics of Vision: Optics, Painting, and Ideology in Germany, 1845-95
- CHAPTER 7 A Magic Bullet: Research for Profit and the Growth of Knowledge in Germany Around 1900
- CHAPTER 8 Practical Reason and the Construction of Knowledge: The Lifeworld of Haber-Bosch
- CHAPTER 9 Instrument Makers and Discipline Builders: The Case of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (In collaboration with Christophe Lécuyer)
- Notes
- Index