Scientific claims implicitly invite criticism. While we might expect that challenging an epistemic authority in religious circles would be seen as an illegitimate activity (e.g. heresy) and met with suppression, challenging an epistemic authority in scientific circles is supposed to be a legitimate form of engagement, and should (ideally) be met with reasoned argument based in empirical evidence. Given this implicit invitation to challenge scientific claims, and the sweeping knowledge claims often made by today’s scientists, it is hardly surprising that people outside narrowly defined scientific communities (i.e. science’s “public”) often challenge the truth of scientific consensuses. The scrutiny of scientific claims by non-scientist membe...
This paper explores the relationship between science and public discourse as an issue of interdiscip...
This paper focuses on how the personal epistemologies of scientists and science communicators shape ...
In 1854 the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley pointed to a significant change in the way that reviewers ...
Scientific claims implicitly invite criticism. While we might expect that challenging an epistemic a...
As science studies scholars, one of our basic tasks is to draw the boundaries that will de?ne our un...
This essay discusses the major themes that emerged as part of an Octavian roundtable discussion on t...
This paper explores the phenomena of public scientific debates, where scientific controversies are a...
Scientific disagreements are an important catalyst for scientific progress. But what happens when sc...
Public discussions of science are often marred by two pernicious phenomena: a widespread rejection o...
This introductory essay looks back on the two decades since the journal Public Understanding of Scie...
As science studies scholars, one of our basic tasks is to draw the boundaries that will define our u...
Scientific curation, where scientific evidence is selected and shared, is essential to public belief...
Copyright © The Author(s) 2023. Who is licensed to make knowledge claims about society? A more diffu...
For decades, cigarette companies helped to promote the impression that there was no scientific conse...
Over the past decades there has been an increasing recognition of theneed to promote dialogue betwee...
This paper explores the relationship between science and public discourse as an issue of interdiscip...
This paper focuses on how the personal epistemologies of scientists and science communicators shape ...
In 1854 the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley pointed to a significant change in the way that reviewers ...
Scientific claims implicitly invite criticism. While we might expect that challenging an epistemic a...
As science studies scholars, one of our basic tasks is to draw the boundaries that will de?ne our un...
This essay discusses the major themes that emerged as part of an Octavian roundtable discussion on t...
This paper explores the phenomena of public scientific debates, where scientific controversies are a...
Scientific disagreements are an important catalyst for scientific progress. But what happens when sc...
Public discussions of science are often marred by two pernicious phenomena: a widespread rejection o...
This introductory essay looks back on the two decades since the journal Public Understanding of Scie...
As science studies scholars, one of our basic tasks is to draw the boundaries that will define our u...
Scientific curation, where scientific evidence is selected and shared, is essential to public belief...
Copyright © The Author(s) 2023. Who is licensed to make knowledge claims about society? A more diffu...
For decades, cigarette companies helped to promote the impression that there was no scientific conse...
Over the past decades there has been an increasing recognition of theneed to promote dialogue betwee...
This paper explores the relationship between science and public discourse as an issue of interdiscip...
This paper focuses on how the personal epistemologies of scientists and science communicators shape ...
In 1854 the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley pointed to a significant change in the way that reviewers ...