The Lippard Blog
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Haven't we already been nonmodern?
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Being modern, argues Bruno Latour in We Have Never Been Modern (1993, Harvard Univ. Press), involves drawing a sharp distinction between “n...
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Matthew LaClair vs. Texas Board of Education
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Matthew LaClair, who exposed his proselytizing U.S. history teacher/youth pastor in 2006 , now hosts his own radio show, "Equal Time fo...
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Translating local knowledge into state-legible science
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James Scott’s Seeing Like a State (about which I've blogged previously ) talks about how the state imposes standards in order to make f...
1 comment:
Monday, April 19, 2010
Is the general public really that ignorant? Public understanding of science vs. civic epistemology
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Studies of the public understanding of science generally produce results that show a disturbingly high level of ignorance. When asked to ag...
11 comments:
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Winner's techne and politeia, 22 years later
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Chapter 3 of Langdon Winner’s The Whale and the Reactor (1988) is titled “ Techné and Politeia ,” a discussion of the relationship of tech...
Wednesday, April 07, 2010
Many Species of Animal Law
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Today I went to hear Bruce Wagman speak on the subject of "Many Species of Animal Law" at ASU's Sandra Day O'Connor Colleg...
4 comments:
Tuesday, April 06, 2010
First two stray dogs of 2010
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I caught these two male dogs in the front yard this afternoon--they wandered in while the gate was open, and I closed it to catch them. No ...
2 comments:
Against "coloring book" history of science
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It's a bad misconception about evolution that it proceeds in a linear progression of one successfully evolving species after another dis...
Friday, April 02, 2010
Scientific autonomy, objectivity, and the value-free ideal
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It has been argued by many that science, politics, and religion are distinct subjects that should be kept separate, in at least one directio...
Thursday, April 01, 2010
Galileo on the relation between science and religion
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Galileo’s view of natural philosophy (science) is that it is the study of the book of nature,” “written in mathematical language” (Finocchia...
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