The Future of Social Epistemology
A Collective Vision
Herausgeber: Collier, James H.
The Future of Social Epistemology
A Collective Vision
Herausgeber: Collier, James H.
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Offers a vital, unique and agenda-setting perspective for the field of social epistemology - the philosophical basis for prescribing the social means and ends for pursuing knowledge.
Offers a vital, unique and agenda-setting perspective for the field of social epistemology - the philosophical basis for prescribing the social means and ends for pursuing knowledge.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Collective Studies in Knowledge and Society
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 640g
- ISBN-13: 9781783482658
- ISBN-10: 1783482656
- Artikelnr.: 42808930
- Collective Studies in Knowledge and Society
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 640g
- ISBN-13: 9781783482658
- ISBN-10: 1783482656
- Artikelnr.: 42808930
Edited by James H. Collier
Introduction, James H. Collier / Part I: Conducting Social Epistemology /
1. How Can We Collectivize a Set of Visions about Social Epistemology?,
Fred D'Agostino / 2. A Comic Moment for Social Epistemology, Joan Leach /
3. Knowing Humanity in the Social World: A Social Epistemology Collective
Vision?, Francis Remedios / 4. A Social Epistemology for Scientific
Excellence, David Budtz Pedersen / 5. From Social Epistemology to Reflexive
Sociology, Inanna Hamati-Ataya and Stephen Norrie / 6. The Politics of
Social Epistemology, Susan Dieleman, María G. Navarro and Elisabeth
Simbürger / Part II: Extending Conceptions of Knowing / 7. Metaphor and
Social Epistemology, Martin Evenden / 8. Memetics vs. Human Extension:
Round Two, Gregory Sandstrom / 9. A 'Dialectical Moment': Desire and the
Commodity of Knowledge, Patrick J. Reider / 10. Navigating the Dialectics
of Objectivity, Guy Axtell / 11. Epistemic Burdens and the Value of
Ignorance, Phil Olson / 12. Freeing Knowledge: The Future of Critical
Knowledge Production in the New Age of Corporate Universities and the
Renegade Generation of Researchers, Adam Riggio / Part III: Regarding the
Individual and the Collective / 13. Are You Thinking What We're Thinking?
Eric Kerr / 14. Disagreement and the Ethics of Belief, Jonathan Matheson /
15. Doxastic Involuntarism, Attentional Voluntarism, and Social
Epistemology, Mark Douglas West / 16. Empirical Social Epistemology:
Addressing the Normativity of Social Forces, Miika Vähämaa / 17. On
Feminist Epistemology: The Fallibility of Gendered Science, Diana Rishani /
18. The Cost of Being Known: Economics, Science Communication and Epistemic
Justice, Fabien Medvecky / 19. Social Epistemology, Dialectics and
Horizontal Normativity: An Introduction to the Theory of Natural Authority,
Pedro Saez Williams / Part IV: Envisioning our Human Future / 20.
Visioneering Our Future, Laura Cabrera, William Davis and Melissa Orozco /
21. Dreaming the Future: What it Means to be Human, Emma Craddock / 22.
Human Enhancement: Visual Representation and the Production of Knowledge,
Victoria Peake / 23. Is Transhumanism Gendered? The Road from Haraway,
Steve Fuller and Veronika Lipinska / 24. Beyond Black and Green: Children
Visioneering the Future, Emilie Whitaker / 25. Prolegomena for a Theory of
Justice for a Proactionary Age, Steve Fuller / Epilogue / Notes on
Contributors / Index
1. How Can We Collectivize a Set of Visions about Social Epistemology?,
Fred D'Agostino / 2. A Comic Moment for Social Epistemology, Joan Leach /
3. Knowing Humanity in the Social World: A Social Epistemology Collective
Vision?, Francis Remedios / 4. A Social Epistemology for Scientific
Excellence, David Budtz Pedersen / 5. From Social Epistemology to Reflexive
Sociology, Inanna Hamati-Ataya and Stephen Norrie / 6. The Politics of
Social Epistemology, Susan Dieleman, María G. Navarro and Elisabeth
Simbürger / Part II: Extending Conceptions of Knowing / 7. Metaphor and
Social Epistemology, Martin Evenden / 8. Memetics vs. Human Extension:
Round Two, Gregory Sandstrom / 9. A 'Dialectical Moment': Desire and the
Commodity of Knowledge, Patrick J. Reider / 10. Navigating the Dialectics
of Objectivity, Guy Axtell / 11. Epistemic Burdens and the Value of
Ignorance, Phil Olson / 12. Freeing Knowledge: The Future of Critical
Knowledge Production in the New Age of Corporate Universities and the
Renegade Generation of Researchers, Adam Riggio / Part III: Regarding the
Individual and the Collective / 13. Are You Thinking What We're Thinking?
Eric Kerr / 14. Disagreement and the Ethics of Belief, Jonathan Matheson /
15. Doxastic Involuntarism, Attentional Voluntarism, and Social
Epistemology, Mark Douglas West / 16. Empirical Social Epistemology:
Addressing the Normativity of Social Forces, Miika Vähämaa / 17. On
Feminist Epistemology: The Fallibility of Gendered Science, Diana Rishani /
18. The Cost of Being Known: Economics, Science Communication and Epistemic
Justice, Fabien Medvecky / 19. Social Epistemology, Dialectics and
Horizontal Normativity: An Introduction to the Theory of Natural Authority,
Pedro Saez Williams / Part IV: Envisioning our Human Future / 20.
Visioneering Our Future, Laura Cabrera, William Davis and Melissa Orozco /
21. Dreaming the Future: What it Means to be Human, Emma Craddock / 22.
Human Enhancement: Visual Representation and the Production of Knowledge,
Victoria Peake / 23. Is Transhumanism Gendered? The Road from Haraway,
Steve Fuller and Veronika Lipinska / 24. Beyond Black and Green: Children
Visioneering the Future, Emilie Whitaker / 25. Prolegomena for a Theory of
Justice for a Proactionary Age, Steve Fuller / Epilogue / Notes on
Contributors / Index
Introduction, James H. Collier / Part I: Conducting Social Epistemology /
1. How Can We Collectivize a Set of Visions about Social Epistemology?,
Fred D'Agostino / 2. A Comic Moment for Social Epistemology, Joan Leach /
3. Knowing Humanity in the Social World: A Social Epistemology Collective
Vision?, Francis Remedios / 4. A Social Epistemology for Scientific
Excellence, David Budtz Pedersen / 5. From Social Epistemology to Reflexive
Sociology, Inanna Hamati-Ataya and Stephen Norrie / 6. The Politics of
Social Epistemology, Susan Dieleman, María G. Navarro and Elisabeth
Simbürger / Part II: Extending Conceptions of Knowing / 7. Metaphor and
Social Epistemology, Martin Evenden / 8. Memetics vs. Human Extension:
Round Two, Gregory Sandstrom / 9. A 'Dialectical Moment': Desire and the
Commodity of Knowledge, Patrick J. Reider / 10. Navigating the Dialectics
of Objectivity, Guy Axtell / 11. Epistemic Burdens and the Value of
Ignorance, Phil Olson / 12. Freeing Knowledge: The Future of Critical
Knowledge Production in the New Age of Corporate Universities and the
Renegade Generation of Researchers, Adam Riggio / Part III: Regarding the
Individual and the Collective / 13. Are You Thinking What We're Thinking?
Eric Kerr / 14. Disagreement and the Ethics of Belief, Jonathan Matheson /
15. Doxastic Involuntarism, Attentional Voluntarism, and Social
Epistemology, Mark Douglas West / 16. Empirical Social Epistemology:
Addressing the Normativity of Social Forces, Miika Vähämaa / 17. On
Feminist Epistemology: The Fallibility of Gendered Science, Diana Rishani /
18. The Cost of Being Known: Economics, Science Communication and Epistemic
Justice, Fabien Medvecky / 19. Social Epistemology, Dialectics and
Horizontal Normativity: An Introduction to the Theory of Natural Authority,
Pedro Saez Williams / Part IV: Envisioning our Human Future / 20.
Visioneering Our Future, Laura Cabrera, William Davis and Melissa Orozco /
21. Dreaming the Future: What it Means to be Human, Emma Craddock / 22.
Human Enhancement: Visual Representation and the Production of Knowledge,
Victoria Peake / 23. Is Transhumanism Gendered? The Road from Haraway,
Steve Fuller and Veronika Lipinska / 24. Beyond Black and Green: Children
Visioneering the Future, Emilie Whitaker / 25. Prolegomena for a Theory of
Justice for a Proactionary Age, Steve Fuller / Epilogue / Notes on
Contributors / Index
1. How Can We Collectivize a Set of Visions about Social Epistemology?,
Fred D'Agostino / 2. A Comic Moment for Social Epistemology, Joan Leach /
3. Knowing Humanity in the Social World: A Social Epistemology Collective
Vision?, Francis Remedios / 4. A Social Epistemology for Scientific
Excellence, David Budtz Pedersen / 5. From Social Epistemology to Reflexive
Sociology, Inanna Hamati-Ataya and Stephen Norrie / 6. The Politics of
Social Epistemology, Susan Dieleman, María G. Navarro and Elisabeth
Simbürger / Part II: Extending Conceptions of Knowing / 7. Metaphor and
Social Epistemology, Martin Evenden / 8. Memetics vs. Human Extension:
Round Two, Gregory Sandstrom / 9. A 'Dialectical Moment': Desire and the
Commodity of Knowledge, Patrick J. Reider / 10. Navigating the Dialectics
of Objectivity, Guy Axtell / 11. Epistemic Burdens and the Value of
Ignorance, Phil Olson / 12. Freeing Knowledge: The Future of Critical
Knowledge Production in the New Age of Corporate Universities and the
Renegade Generation of Researchers, Adam Riggio / Part III: Regarding the
Individual and the Collective / 13. Are You Thinking What We're Thinking?
Eric Kerr / 14. Disagreement and the Ethics of Belief, Jonathan Matheson /
15. Doxastic Involuntarism, Attentional Voluntarism, and Social
Epistemology, Mark Douglas West / 16. Empirical Social Epistemology:
Addressing the Normativity of Social Forces, Miika Vähämaa / 17. On
Feminist Epistemology: The Fallibility of Gendered Science, Diana Rishani /
18. The Cost of Being Known: Economics, Science Communication and Epistemic
Justice, Fabien Medvecky / 19. Social Epistemology, Dialectics and
Horizontal Normativity: An Introduction to the Theory of Natural Authority,
Pedro Saez Williams / Part IV: Envisioning our Human Future / 20.
Visioneering Our Future, Laura Cabrera, William Davis and Melissa Orozco /
21. Dreaming the Future: What it Means to be Human, Emma Craddock / 22.
Human Enhancement: Visual Representation and the Production of Knowledge,
Victoria Peake / 23. Is Transhumanism Gendered? The Road from Haraway,
Steve Fuller and Veronika Lipinska / 24. Beyond Black and Green: Children
Visioneering the Future, Emilie Whitaker / 25. Prolegomena for a Theory of
Justice for a Proactionary Age, Steve Fuller / Epilogue / Notes on
Contributors / Index