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.
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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.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Collective Studies in Knowledge and Society
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield International
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 432g
- ISBN-13: 9781783482665
- ISBN-10: 1783482664
- Artikelnr.: 42998267
- Collective Studies in Knowledge and Society
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield International
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 432g
- ISBN-13: 9781783482665
- ISBN-10: 1783482664
- Artikelnr.: 42998267
James H. Collier is Associate Professor of Science and Technology in Society at Virginia Tech. He is the Executive Editor of Social Epistemology and the Founding and Acting Editor of the Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective, www.social-epistemology.com. Contributors: Thomas Basbøll, Writing Consultant, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark; Laura Cabrera, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, National Centre for Neuroethics, University of British Columbia, Canada; Emma Craddock, Postgraduate Research Student, Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham, UK; William Davis, Doctoral Candidate, Science and Technology in Society, Virginia Tech University, USA; Susan Dieleman, Assistant Professor, Philosophy, Dalhoisie University, USA; Martin Evenden, Assistant Professor, English, National Taichung University of Education, Taiwan; Steve Fuller, Professor, Sociology, University of Warwick, UK; Inanna Hamati-Ataya, Reader in International Politics, Aberystwyth University, UK; Eric Kerr, Postdoctoral Fellow, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore; Joan Leach, Associate Professor, School of English, Media Studies and Art History University of Queensland, Australia; Veronika Lipinska, independent scholar, UK; Carlo Martini, Postdoctoral Researcher, Finnish Centre of Excellence in the Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Finland; Jonathan Matheson, Assistant Professor Philosophy, University of North Florida, USA; Fabien Medvecky, Faculty Member, University of Otago, Centre for Science Communication, New Zealand; María G. Navarro, Postdoctoral Researcher, Spanish Council for Scientific Research; Stephen Norrie, Lecturer, Loughborough University, UK; Phil Olson, Assistant Professor, Science and Technology in Society, Virginia Tech University, USA; Melissa Orozco, Psychology Faculty, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, Mexico; Victoria Peake, Graduate Student, Sociology, University of Warwick, UK; David Budtz Pedersen, Co-Director and Research Fellow at the Humanomics Research Centre, University of Copenhagen, and Strategic Adviser to the Danish Ministry of Science, Aarhus University, Denmark; Patrick J. Reider, Instructor, Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh, USA; Francis Remedios, Independent Researcher, Canada; Adam Riggio, Professional Teacher and Writer of Philosophy, Novelist, McMaster University, Canada; Diana Rishani, Research Assistant at United Nations Population Fund, American University Beirut, Lebanon; Gregory Sandstrom, Post-Doctoral Researcher, European Humanities University, Lithuania; Elisabeth Simbürger, Faculty Member, Universidad Valparaíso, Valparaíso de Chile; Miika Vähämaa, Researcher, University of Helsinki, Finland; Mark West, Professor, Mass Communication, University of North Carolina, Asheville, USA; Emilie Whitaker, Doctoral Researcher, University of Birmingham. UK; Pedro Saez Williams, Doctoral Candidate, University of Warwick, UK
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