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Title: Scandalous Knowledge: Science, Truth, and the Human (Science and Cultural Theory)
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Manufacturer: Duke University Press
List Price: $21.95
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| Scandalous Knowledge: Science, Truth, and the Human (Science and Cultural Theory) by Duke University Press A guide to the nature of knowledge and truth | This set of essays provides a useful perspective on the ongoing (and frequently confused and confusing) debate between constructivist epistemology and the older rationalist/positivist view of knowledge (the 'culture wars'). These topics are abstract and somewhat elusive, but are also both important and interesting.
Smith wields concepts with craft and precision. Her writing is relatively dense for those not familiar with this territory, but she is clear and ultimately rewarding. Well worth the effort. | | Scandalous Knowledge: Science, Truth, and the Human (Science and Cultural Theory) by Duke University Press Product Description | Throughout the recent culture and science “wars,” the radically new conceptions of knowledge and science emerging from such fields as the history and sociology of science have been denounced by various journalists, scientists, and academics as irresponsible attacks on science, absurd denials of objective reality, or a cynical abandonment of truth itself. In Scandalous Knowledge, Barbara Herrnstein Smith explores and illuminates the intellectual contexts of these crude denunciations. A preeminent scholar, theorist, and analyst of intellectual history, Smith begins by looking closely at the epistemological developments at issue. She presents a clear, historically informed, and philosophically sophisticated overview of important twentieth-century critiques of traditional—rationalist, realist, positivist—accounts of human knowledge and scientific truth, and discusses in detail the alternative accounts produced by Ludwik Fleck, Thomas Kuhn, Michel Foucault, Bruno Latour, and others.
With keen wit, Smith demonstrates that the familiar charges involved in these scandals—including the recurrent invocation of “postmodern relativism”—protect intellectual orthodoxy by falsely associating important intellectual developments with logically absurd and morally or politically disabling positions. She goes on to offer bold, original, and insightful perspectives on the currently strained relations between the natural sciences and the humanities; on the grandiose but dubious claims of evolutionary psychology to explain human behavior, cognition, and culture; and on contemporary controversies over the psychology, biology, and ethics of animal-human relations. Scandalous Knowledge is a provocative and compelling intervention into controversies that continue to roil through journalism, pulpits, laboratories, and classrooms throughout the United States and Europe. |
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