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Politics & Science: An Historical View |
| Table of Contents | Paper Summaries and Notes on Contributors |
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This volume of social research follows on the heels of an issue that shares its focus, but with one difference. The earlier issue, “Politics and Science: How Their Interplay Results in Public Policy” (Fall 2006), contained papers delivered at the fifteenth Social Research conference, held in February 2006. Both the conference and the fall 2006 issue focused on the current state of affairs in the United States and looked back only at the recent past in this country. What distinguishes the current issue is not only its focus on the more distant past but also that it sets out to examine the relationship between politics and science in a far broader political and cultural context—one that looks at other countries, at other times. Arien Mack |
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Paper Summaries and Notes
on Contributors
(at
time of publication)
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Authority, Political Theology, and the Politics of Knowledge in the Transition from Medieval to Early Modern Catholicism
This paper is a contribution to a revision of the narrative about science and religion in Catholic culture, represented in modern historiography as a story of inevitable conflict. The main thread of the argument follows Catholic notions of cognitive and political_theological authority as they developed from the High Middle Ages to early modernity. A nuanced analysis of the ways in which the concept of authority functioned in Catholic discourses about faith is the background for interpreting the possibilities and constraints that guided the Jesuit educational project in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The “Imperial Chancellor of the Sciences”: Helmholtz between Science and Politics This essay uses aspects of Hermann von Helmholtz's career and analyzes parts of several of his major addresses to convey his understanding of the relations of science and the state in nineteenth_century Germany. It suggests that there were practical institutional and ideological constraints within German university life, and in the relations between the universities and the individual German states that imposed a considerable measure of insulation on science in Germany; paradoxically, this allowed the universities and the sciences freedom to grow institutionally and flourish intellectually within what was otherwise a politically conservative and authoritarian state structure and landscape. Finally, the essay seeks to describe Helmholtz's general political outlook while suggesting that, though he was unpolitical in the conventional sense of "political," his prominence as a scientific and cultural figure in Germany after 1850 made him into a political symbol of science.
Patent Republic: Representing Inventions, Constructing Rights and Authors
Today's discussions about the pros and cons of intellectual property are essentially political in nature, hinging on different views on the right balance between what should be or remain public and what should be allowed to become private (and for how long) so as to provide incentives to innovation. My goal in this paper is to examine this balance in the mundane details of patent applications, particularly a very mundane but key step in the patent application: the disclosure of the invention. The very discourse of disclosure emerges together with a shift in economic political regimes from absolutist/monarchic to liberal and then liberal democratic. It is this transition that creates the conditions of possibility for disclosure requirements in patent law. This shift in patent law marks the first time the state required that technology be made public (in the sense of being accessible to citizens). This is also the beginning of the modern legitimation of the patent system. It is the act of disclosure to society that justifies the otherwise problematic practice of giving monopolies.
Big Revolution, Little Revolution: Science and Politics in Bolshevik Russia
This article examines the multilayered interactions between science and politics in the aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution that paved the way for the "little revolution" -- the transition from "little science" to "big science" in Soviet Russia. It explores the mechanisms and dynamics of the alliance between Russian scientists and the Bolshevik state, identifies the talking partners and the languages they spoke, and analyzes the institutional structures and professional cultures that emerged as a result of this developing symbiosis.
Public Knowledge and the Difficulties of Democracy
This paper undertakes an initial foray into the central problems epistemological problems for our times, not problems of individual knowledge but of the character of knowledge as a public good and the systems that generate and sustain that good. Given that we do not exist in an epistemic utopia of significance, reliability, and transparency, I present the Inquiry_and_Information_System (IIS) as a focus for epistemological discussion, scrutiny, and improvement. There is a myth about the state of current democracies, that exposing their inadequacies shows the kinds of reforms of the IIS that are needed, that we can recognize, in general, the modifications of public reasoning that are required, and that the elaboration of this should be through detailed responses to particular issues that now confront us. I suggest we should take up Dewey's socio_political conception of epistemology as the piecemeal improvement of the IIS.
The Physics of Spin: Sputnik Politics and American Physicists in the 1950s
Thoughts on the Politicization of Science through Commercialization
There are two genres of outcry in the US concerning the current state of science in public life: politicization of science in the federal government and commercialization of academic research. Strangely, these two genres have never been systematically connected. In the process of politicization since the 1990s, commercially funded think tanks have supplied one of the primary sources for politically charged science policy. But the rapidly accelerating commercialization of academic research threatens to make universities and federal research institutions look similarly political. This development has already begun to undermine public trust in science. Erosion of public trust presents a public challenge for democratic societies, which rely on trustworthy knowledge for the responsible action of citizens and legislators.
Speaking Precision to Power: The Modern Political Role of Social Science
The modern compact between science and the state allows for the flow of public money to research and an expectation that politicians will generally not meddle with the scientific work, on condition that the science, reciprocally, should stay clear of politics. That seems at first a harmless constraint, yet in none of these areas can scientific research now stand apart from charged public issues. The claim for its ideological neutrality depends on consigning social science to the realm of facts rather than values, while conceding the legitimacy of political judgment in deciding how to use this information as a basis for action. Not its objects--which, being social, political, economic, and historical, are very human--but its methods, rigorous and impersonal, are taken as the ground for social science objectivity.
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