Philosophy, rhetoric, and the end of knowledge: the coming of science and technology studies/

Fuller, Steve

Philosophy, rhetoric, and the end of knowledge: the coming of science and technology studies/ Steve Fuller and James H. Collier - 2nd ed. - New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004. - xxix, 367 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.

Introduction 2003: The More Things Remain the Same, the More They Change --
The Players and the Position --
The Players: STS, Rhetoric, and Social Epistemology --
HPS as the Prehistory of STS --
The Turn to Sociology and STS --
Rhetoric: The Theory Behind the Practice --
Enter the Social Epistemologist --
The Position: Interdisciplinarity as Interpenetration --
The Terms of the Argument --
The Perils of Pluralism --
Interpenetration's Interlopers --
The Pressure Points for Interpenetration --
The Task Ahead (and the Enemy Within) --
Here I Stand --
Interpenetration at Work --
Incorporation, or Epistemology Emergent --
Tycho on the Run --
Hegel to the Rescue --
Building the Better Naturalist --
Naturalism's Trial by Fire --
Reflexion, or the Missing Mirror of the Social Sciences --
How Science Both Requires and Imposes Discipline --
Why the Scientific Study of Science Might Just Show That There Is No Science to Study --
The Elusive Search for the Science in the Social Sciences: Deconstructing the Five Canonical Histories --
How Economists Defeated Political Scientists at Their Own Game --
The Rhetoric That Is Science --
Sublimation, or Some Hints on How to Be Cognitively Revolting --
Of Rhetorical Impasses and Forced Choices --
Some Impasses in the AI Debates --
Drawing the Battle Lines --
AI as PC-Positivism --
How My Enemy's Enemy Became My Friend --
But Now That the Coast is Clear --
Three Attempts to Clarify the Cognitive --
AI's Strange Bedfellows: Actants.

9780805847673


Rhetoric--Philosophy
Science--Philosophy
Science--Social aspects
Social sciences--Philosophy

501 / FUL/P
SIKKIM UNIVERSITY
University Portal | Contact Librarian | Library Portal

Powered by Koha