The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the modern image of scientific authority and objectivity through social and literary technologies that systematically exclude non-hegemonic groups (women, colored people). The paper argues that the figure of the self-invisible modest witness in technoscientific discourse should be queered in order to enable a more corporeal and situated form of knowledge
This book offers the first in-depth study of the masculine self-fashioning of scientific practitione...
There are powerful social, political, and epistemological reasons for concealing (or revealing) cert...
My paper proposes a role for contemporary art as part of the broader accelerationist project, summar...
The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the mo...
In her essay, "Modest_Witness@Second_ Millenium" Donna Haraway writes about the ?modest witness?, th...
Two-way public engagement with science is an important modern democratic practice that paradoxically...
In her recent case study, Elizabeth Potter attempts to show how Boyle's experimental method was bias...
This article uses the voluminous public discourse around Rachel Carson and her controversial bestsel...
Purpose. The paper is aimed at identifying the ways of scientist’s influence on the development of m...
The visibility and invisibility of scientific knowledge, its creation, and of scientists are at the ...
In this essay, I examine Robert Boyle's strategies for making imperceptible entities accessible to t...
There are powerful social, political, and epistemological reasons for concealing (or revealing) cert...
Copyright © 2004 University of Chicago PressThe article is not the final print version, and is not t...
Fellow of the History of Science for the BioLogos Foundation and Distinguished Professor of the Hist...
Giving humility a key role in scientific practice and communication would improve its objective soci...
This book offers the first in-depth study of the masculine self-fashioning of scientific practitione...
There are powerful social, political, and epistemological reasons for concealing (or revealing) cert...
My paper proposes a role for contemporary art as part of the broader accelerationist project, summar...
The article discusses the figure of the British scientist Robert Boyle as the construction of the mo...
In her essay, "Modest_Witness@Second_ Millenium" Donna Haraway writes about the ?modest witness?, th...
Two-way public engagement with science is an important modern democratic practice that paradoxically...
In her recent case study, Elizabeth Potter attempts to show how Boyle's experimental method was bias...
This article uses the voluminous public discourse around Rachel Carson and her controversial bestsel...
Purpose. The paper is aimed at identifying the ways of scientist’s influence on the development of m...
The visibility and invisibility of scientific knowledge, its creation, and of scientists are at the ...
In this essay, I examine Robert Boyle's strategies for making imperceptible entities accessible to t...
There are powerful social, political, and epistemological reasons for concealing (or revealing) cert...
Copyright © 2004 University of Chicago PressThe article is not the final print version, and is not t...
Fellow of the History of Science for the BioLogos Foundation and Distinguished Professor of the Hist...
Giving humility a key role in scientific practice and communication would improve its objective soci...
This book offers the first in-depth study of the masculine self-fashioning of scientific practitione...
There are powerful social, political, and epistemological reasons for concealing (or revealing) cert...
My paper proposes a role for contemporary art as part of the broader accelerationist project, summar...