New Frontiers in Science and Technology StudiesISBN: 978-0-7456-3694-8
Paperback
240 pages
October 2007, Polity
Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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Raphael Sassower, University of Colorado, Colorado
Springs
“Fuller provides a scintillating critique of the
fashionable actor network theory and other anti-humanist projects
that, their claims to the contrary notwithstanding, threaten to
derail the critical and democratic potential of STS. His insightful
and lively diagnosis of the past and the present state of the field
enables him to formulate an exciting and politically engaged agenda
for STS.”
Zaheer Baber, University of Toronto
“In recognition of the great changes in science in last
two decades, STS has become focused on technoscience and regulatory
science and the new institutional realities of science. What has
been lost sight of, Fuller points out, are some other topics that
have changed along with this change: the public justification and
face of science, the ways in which science understands the problem
of the unity of knowledge, new meanings of old concepts, such as
fraud and consensus, and demands to democraitze knowledge. With an
eye to the grand figures of the past, he restates the big issues
for the present – a much needed effort.”
Stephen Turner, University of South Florida