Politics of Nature: How to Bring the Sciences into Democracy
only the stammerings of the orator Demosthenes but the complete gamut from silence to logorrhea. The “bifurcation of nature,” t ...
Szerszynski, et al. 1996, and Irwin and Wynne 1996, and soundly deconstructed in Callon, Lascoumes, et al. 2001. All these studi ...
into account on alert right away. It is through this feature that I shall define civiliza- tion* later on, and it is that which ...
Darwin is obviously innocent of the Darwinisms committed in his name. De- spite his borrowings from Malthus, he is in no way gu ...
menting problem of poverty now stood revealed: economic society was subjected to laws which werenothuman laws. The rift between ...
I have restricted myself to the trades that modernism has exploited most. This is why, despite its importance, law is not menti ...
“Sokalists”: the law of universal gravity is now quite solidlyestablished—even though it no longer has in 1, 2, and 3 the same c ...
discovery of acknowledged facts, it loses some of its trenchancy, its arbitrariness, and becomes the “discovery” of the solution ...
have no responsibility in the matter, denying any performative role in the formatting of connections; conversely, they assert wi ...
nalist, Jean-Yves Nau, praises the French system of blood transfusions because it was able to move quickly to a state of alert w ...
act sciences, not because the latter would treat their candidates for existence as objects that can be mastered at will, but on ...
These can be decided neither by a previously determined general norm nor by the judg- ment of a disinterested and therefore neut ...
phenomenon that is in its turn quite banal. At the very moment when Descartes, sit- ting all alone by his stove, formulates his“ ...
criticism (Lippmann 1922); on this, see Marres forthcoming. Lippmann’s solution— technocracy—having triumphed for half a century ...
emy from a criminal, he makes the error of completely forgetting nonhumans and con- fusing politics in general with just one of ...
spected as one culture “among others” has on a “culture,” deprived of privileged access to reality. I had tried, in my investig ...
to put an end to civil wars by making peace over laboratory facts observed by gentle- men, the twenty-first century is reopening ...
on two billion years! That would satisfy no one. The diplomat goes much further: he demands that we put on the table what a God ...
...
Bibliography Acot, Pascal. 1998.The European Origins of Scientific Ecology.Paris: Editions des Archives Contemporaines. Akrich, ...
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