306.45 SCI The Science Studies Reader / ed. M. Biagioli; in cons. with P. Galison [et al.]. - London ; New York : Routledge, 1999. - xviii, 590 p. - Bibliography : p. 576 - 582. - ISBN 0-415-91868-5. - Текст : непосредственный. About contributors : p. 569 - 575. Index : p. 587 - 590
Barad, Karen. Agential Realism : Feminist Interventions in Understanding Scientific Practices / K. Barad Biagioli, Mario. Aporias of Scientific Authorship : Credit and Responsibility in Contemporary Biomedicine / M. Biagioli Bourdieu, Pierre. The Specificity of the Scientific Field and the Social Conditions of the Progress of Reason / P. Bourdieu Brain, Robert. Muscles and Engines : Indicator Diargams and Helmholtz's Graphical Methods / R. M. Brain, M. N. Wise Callon, Michael. Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation : Domestication of the Scallops and the Fisherman of St. Brieuc Bay / M. Callon Cohen, Sande. Reading Science Studies Writing / S. Cohen Collins, H. M. The TEA Set : Tacit Knowledge and Scientific Networks / H. M. Collins Daston, Lorraine. Objectivity and the Escape from Perspective / L. Daston Davidson, Arnold. Styles of Reasoning, Conceptual History, and the Emergence of Psychiatry / A. I. Davidson Galison, Peter. Trading Zone : Coordinating Action and Belief / P. Galison Hacking, Ian. Making Up People / I. Hacking Haraway, Donna. Situated Knowledges : the Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective / D. J. Haraway Hart, Roger. On the Problem of Chinese Science / R. Hart Hughes, Thomas. The Evolution of Large Technological Systems / T. P. Hughes Kay, Lily. In the Beginning Was the Word? The Genetic Code and the Book of Life / L. E. Kay Keller, Evelyn Fox. The Gender / Science System : or, Is Sex to Gender as Nature Is to Science? / E. F. Keller Kohler, Robert. Moral Economy, Material Culture, and Community in Drosophila Genetics / R. E. Kohler Latour, Bruno. Give Me a Laboratory and I Will Raise the World / B. Latour Latour, Bruno. One More Turn After the Social Turn / B. Latour Lenoir, Timothy. Was the Last Turn the Right Turn? The SemioticTurn and A. J. Greimas / T. Lenoir Lloyd, Geoffrey. Science in Antiquity : the Greek and Chinese Cases and Their Relevance to the Problems of Culture and Cognition / G. Lloyd Lynch, Michael. Pictures, Texts, and Objects : the Literary Language Game of Bird-Watching / M. Lynch, J. Law Mackenzie, Donald. Nuclear Missile Testing and the Social Construction of Accuracy / D. Mackenzie Martin, Emily. Toward an Anthropology of Immunology : the Body as Nation State / E. Martin Pickering, Andrew. The Mangle of Practice : Agency and Emergence in the Sociology of Science / A. Pickering Porter, Theodore. Quantification and the Accounting Ideal in Science / T. M. Porter Rabinow, Paul. Artificiality and Enlightenment : from Sociobiology to Biosociality / P. Rabinow Rheinberger, Hans-Jorg. Experimental Systems : Historiality, Narration, and Deconstruction / H. -J. Rheinberger Rotman, Brian. Thinking Dia-Grams : Mathematics and Writing / B. Rotman Rouse, Joseph. Understanding Scientific Practices : Cultural Studies of Science as a Philosophical Program / J. Rouse Schaffer, Simon. Late Victorian Metrology and Its Instrumentation : a Manufactory of Ohms / S. Schaffer Shapin, Steven. The House of Experiment in Seventeenth-Century England / S. Shapin Star, Susan Leigh. Institutional Ecology, "Translation", and Boundary Objects : Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeleys Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907 - 1939 / S. L. Star, J. R. Griesemer Traweek, Sharon. Pilgrim's Progress : Male Tales Told during a Life in Physics / S. Traweek Turkle, Sherry. What Are We Thinking about When We Are Thinking about Computers? / S. Turkle Wylie, Alison. The Engendering of Archaeology : Refiguring Feminist Science Studies / A. Wylie
"The Science Studies Reader" is a landmark anthology of writing in the burgeoning field of science studies. Society and scientific community are today engaging more thoughtfully than ever before the question of what "scientific knowledge" might be. This collection of writings by some of the most prominent thinkers in the field speaks to the nature of science and its production across time, cultures, and genders. The Reader focuses on the practices of modern and contemporary science and technology in different national and institutional settings, with some attention to non-Western contexts. Here are essays on the gender dimensions of science, the moral economies of scientific communities, imaging techniques, techniques of communication, and many other current subjects. The collection represents science as crucially connected to issues within contemporary history, sociology, gender studies, anthropology, and cultural studies of science. By mapping some of the open questions and points of tension likely to occupy the field for years to come, the Reader casts fresh light on what "science" means at the end of the twentieth century. Mario Biagioli is Professor of the History of Science at Harvard University. He is author, most recently, of "Galileo Courtier" (1993)