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Objectivity

Objectivity - Paperback

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Availability:Out of StockSeries:Mit PressAudience:Young AdultPublish date:2010-07-12Pages:504
Publisher:Zone BooksISBN-13:9781890951795ISBN-10:189095179XUPC:9781890951795Book Category:Philosophy|ScienceBook Subcategory:Epistemology, Philosophy & Social Aspects, HistorySize:9.00 x 6.10 x 1.70 inchesWeight:2.2024Product ID:SCQ5FKDHMZ

Objectivity has a history, and it is full of surprises. In Objectivity, Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison chart the emergence of objectivity in the mid-nineteenth-century sciences -- and show how the concept differs from alternatives, truth-to-nature and trained judgment. This is a story of lofty epistemic ideals fused with workaday practices in the making of scientific images.

From the eighteenth through the early twenty-first centuries, the images that reveal the deepest commitments of the empirical sciences -- from anatomy to crystallography -- are those featured in scientific atlases: the compendia that teach practitioners of a discipline what is worth looking at and how to look at it. Atlas images define the working objects of the sciences of the eye: snowflakes, galaxies, skeletons, even elementary particles.

Galison and Daston use atlas images to uncover a hidden history of scientific objectivity and its rivals. Whether an atlas maker idealizes an image to capture the essentials in the name of truth-to-nature or refuses to erase even the most incidental detail in the name of objectivity or highlights patterns in the name of trained judgment is a decision enforced by an ethos as well as by an epistemology.

As Daston and Galison argue, atlases shape the subjects as well as the objects of science. To pursue objectivity -- or truth-to-nature or trained judgment -- is simultaneously to cultivate a distinctive scientific self wherein knowing and knower converge. Moreover, the very point at which they visibly converge is in the very act of seeing not as a separate individual but as a member of a particular scientific community. Embedded in the atlas image, therefore, are the traces of consequential choices about knowledge, persona, and collective sight. Objectivity is a book addressed to any one interested in the elusive and crucial notion of objectivity -- and in what it means to peer into the world scientifically.
Publisher:Zone BooksISBN-13:9781890951795ISBN-10:189095179XUPC:9781890951795Book Category:Philosophy|ScienceBook Subcategory:Epistemology, Philosophy & Social Aspects, HistorySize:9.00 x 6.10 x 1.70 inchesWeight:2.2024Product ID:SCQ5FKDHMZ

Peter Galison is Pellegrino University Professor of the History of Science and of Physics at Harvard University. He is the author of Einstein's Clocks, Poincare's Maps: Empires of Time, How Experiments End, and Image and Logic: A Material Culture of Microphysics, among other books, and coeditor (with Emily Thompson) of The Architecture of Science (MIT Press, 1999).


Publisher: Zone Books

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