scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Science of Science and Reflexivity

Reads0
Chats0
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."

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Female Students Who Succeed within Higher Technical Education – When and why They Choose and Who They are☆

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on the female students who succeed in civil engineering programs in Sweden, when and why they choose and who they are, and collected data through a questionnaire sent out to all female students enrolled on civil engineering programmes during term 7 (of 10 terms) in Sweden in 2012.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Meeting of Minds: Forging Social and Intellectual Networks within Universities

TL;DR: This article found that social and intellectual relations are clustered and centralized on bridging faculty who form a broader interdisciplinary hub of research in the university, and that, over time, this hub disseminated its style of (interdisciplinary) research to other faculty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Class and Habitus at the End of College: Cultural Similarity and Difference among Graduating Seniors

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of the college experience on culture has been examined and some scholars claim that higher education leads to cultural convergence or homogenization, while others claim that it leads to homogeneity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The (mis)identification of ineffective classroom teaching practice: critical interrogations of classroom teacher effectiveness research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that teacher effectiveness is the defining quality of a policy-making debate that at its core dispenses with broader considerations of possible influence thought to substantially affect the learning outcomes of public school students.
Journal ArticleDOI

Putting security in its place: EU security politics, the European neighbourhood policy and the case for practical reflexivity

TL;DR: This paper argued that reflexivity is a practical concern in, and an integral part of, the research process and argued that the effort to locate security within a given political ordering need to be combined with an effort from scholars to examine their own knowledge-producing practices.