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Science of Science and Reflexivity

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TLDR
Bourdieu's "Science of Science and Reflexivity" as mentioned in this paper argues that science is in danger of becoming a handmaiden to biotechnology, medicine, genetic engineering, and military research that it risks falling under the control of industrial corporations that seek to exploit it for monopolies and profit.
Abstract
Over the last four decades, the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu produced one of the most imaginative and subtle bodies of social theory of the postwar era. When he died in 2002, he was considered to be a thinker on a par with Foucault, Barthes, and Lacan a public intellectual as influential to his generation as Sartre was to his. "Science of Science and Reflexivity" will be welcomed as a companion volume to Bourdieu's now seminal "An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology." In this posthumous work, Bourdieu declares that science is in danger of becoming a handmaiden to biotechnology, medicine, genetic engineering, and military research that it risks falling under the control of industrial corporations that seek to exploit it for monopolies and profit. Science thus endangered can become detrimental to mankind. The line between pure and applied science, therefore, must be subjected to intense theoretical scrutiny. Bourdieu's goals in "Science of Science and Reflexivity" are to identify the social conditions in which science develops in order to reclaim its objectivity and to rescue it from relativism and the forces that might exploit it. In the grand tradition of scientific reflections on science, Bourdieu provides a sociological analysis of the discipline as something capable of producing transhistorical truths; he presents an incisive critique of the main currents in the study of science throughout the past half century; and he offers a spirited defense of science against encroaching political and economic forces. A masterful summation of the principles underlying Bourdieu's oeuvre and a memoir of his own scientific journey, "Science of Science and Reflexivity" is a capstone to one of the most important and prodigious careers in the field of sociology."

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DissertationDOI

Curriculum Policy Enactment and Spaces of Change: A Bourdieuian Field Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the Australian National Curriculum in one case study school in Queensland, Australia, using the theoretical resources of Bourdieu, the authors explored agents' position-making on notions like "what is national", "what has changed", and "how do the objective guidelines inform practices".
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Social Media as a Field for Knowledge Creation

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Book ChapterDOI

Introduction: Rediscovering a Lost Science

TL;DR: A transnational history of national identity is described in this article, where a Europe-centred scientific community, roughly from the 1830s to the 1940s, investigated human biology in order to reveal the racial ‘true identities of European nations.
Book Chapter

Law Through Sociology's Looking Glass: Conflict and Competition in Sociological Studies of Law

Reza Banakar
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss similarities and commonalities between various approaches to the study of law, focusing specifically on the (inter)disciplinary conflicts and competitions between them, as a method for highlighting the discourses which constitute the sociological studies of law.
Book ChapterDOI

Revolutions in Science and Art: Martins, Bourdieu and the Case of Photography

TL;DR: Martins as mentioned in this paper argues that despite the invaluable recent publication of Bourdieu's lectures on Manet's ‘symbolic revolution’, there are certain difficulties with the theory of the cultural field.