Title: SCIENCE
1SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY IN A MULTICULTURAL WORLD
THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF FACTS ARTIFACTS
BY DAVID J. HESS
2David J. Hess
- Anthropologist
- Faculty development grant from Rensselear
Polytechnic Institute - STS interdisciplinary study of science,
technology and society
3Combinations, Contrasts, and Complexities
- Generalist
- Wide in scope
- Cross-cutting
- Dynamic and flexible
Culture
Power
Politics
Society
4What is Knowledge?
- finding patterns in observations and then
organizing the observations into explanations.. -
negotiated
Knowledge is a socially shaped process
constructed
re-constructed
5Ways of knowing .
- Philosophical and Historical Debate
Are there similarities in the way the human mind
organizes the world?
Is there an inherently structured world?
or
6Things to think about
- Do different cultures have different sciences and
technologies or is science and technology
socially neutral and above and beyond culture? - In what ways is scientific knowledge socially
constructed and in what ways is it not? How can
this concept be made both useful and meaningful? - Can you think of ways that the absence of
historically excluded groups (e.g., women,
underrepresented ethnic groups, the poor) shape
the content of scientific knowledge? - Is there discrimination in science? If so, what
should be done about it? - In what ways can society influence the course of
scientific research?
7Definitions and Concepts
- Science
- knowledge about the natural
- world
- Technology
- knowledge about how to create
- effects via artifacts
- Social Constructivism made up of decisions,
observations, generalizations, theories and
methodology - Cultural Relativism interpreting the meaning of
science technology relative to the
understanding of local communities - Techno totemism identification of social
groups with natural phenomena or cultural objects
8What does X mean to Y?
- What is the social significance of
- Science and/or Technology to
- Class Race
- Gender Nationality
- Context possibilities for alternate theories
9International Science?
E I N S T E I N
Pasteur
Galileo
Aristotle
Newton
Copernicus
Mendel
Watson and Crick
DARWIN
10Temporal Cultures
- Epistemes assumptions about knowledge, method
and theory that in any given time period are
shared across disciplines (Foucault, 1986) - Paradigms scientific frameworks that can
undergo dramatic shifts (Kuhn, 1970)
11Scientific Revolution vs Scientific Evolution
- 1600-1800s
- Modern science is it historically
ethnocentric? - Philosophy
- Religion
- Capitalism
- Colonialism
- Counter-culturalism
12How does science gain authority to direct truth
practices?
- Actor-network theory
- Institutional influence
- Public controversy
- Religion
- User Acceptance
13The Scientific and Technical Communities
- Intercultural communication
- Concepts of self
- Body language
- Conversation style
- Hierarchy/Equality relationships
14Non-Western Knowledge Systems
- New World vs Old World societies
- Indigenous people
- Boomerang effect/Pluralism and convergence
- Accupuncture
- Ayurvedic
- Reiki
- Shamanism
- Tai-chi
- Yoga
-
15The good, the bad and the ugly
- Extraction Settlement-Domination
- Knowledge and Power
- Grassroots resistance and development
16Earned Doctorates for U.S. Citizens in the
Physical Sciences
17Multicultural Education
- Recruitment and
- Retention of
- the underrepresented
Diversification of knowledge, design and practice
18New Frontiers
- How are new technologies affecting fundamental
cultural categories such as life, death, and
kinship? (i.e. stem cell research, human genome
project) - Does the Internet promise to increase or
decrease social inequalities, and how might
changes in the technology reduce or exacerbate
this effect?