Results 11 to 20 of about 638 (132)
Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Volume 45, Issue 3, Page 517-523, September 2022.
Rheinberger HJ.
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Tactile Vision, Epistemic Things and Data Visualization. [PDF]
Abstract Hans‐Jörg Rheinberger constructed his historical epistemology of epistemic things by analyzing experimental practices in molecular biology during the 1970s and 80s. With genetic sequencing and multi‐omics approaches, data has become a new resource in the life sciences, questioning the applicability of his concept of experimental system.
Borck C.
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Kitchen phenomenologies: Antiromantic poetics of space and food in the Anthropocene
Short Abstract This paper advances the phenomenologies of everyday space and brings forward new conceptualisations of the kitchen by building upon ecofeminist scholarship and feminist food studies. By mixing these theoretics with ethnographic materials gathered in Xochimilco, Mexico City, the notion of the antiromantic emerges as a guide to building ...
Diego Astorga de Ita
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Water's Ethical Time: The Art of Deindustrialising Human‐Water Relationships
Abstract I explore by way of a thought experiment the temporality of waterways in the context of restorative art interventions. As a substance that moves and gives form, and as a medium that retains and discharges, connects and divides, water that flows can make tangible the experiential flow of return and anticipation.
Ute Eickelkamp
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Waves, Floods, Currents: The Politics and Poetics of Water in Social Movement Analysis
Abstract The task of conceptualising social movements draws on a wealth of watery images, from protest waves and political currents, to imagining mobilisations as tides, ripples, cascades or high‐pressure hydraulics. Called upon to analyse complex processes, these waters have a life of their own, carrying analytical implications while extending a ...
Jamie Matthews
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“Changing” one's mind: Historical epistemology as normative psychology
Abstract This article argues that historical epistemology offers the history of philosophy and science more than a mere tool to write the history of concepts. It does this, first of all, by rereading historical epistemology through Michel Foucault's “techniques of the self.” Second, it turns to the work of Léon Brunschvicg and Gaston Bachelard.
Massimiliano Simons
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Abstract What can we gain from co‐analyzing experimental cultures, regionalization, and disciplinary phenomena of late twentieth century life sciences under our historiographic looking glass? This essay investigates the potential of such a strategy for the case of cell biology after 1960. By merging perspectives from historical epistemology inspired by
Hanna Lucia Worliczek
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Environmental Chemistry of Radionuclides : Open Questions and Perspectives
Environmental radiochemistry and radioecology have intended to assess the impact and inventory of very low levels of radionuclide in specific ecosystems. But ultra‐trace environmental levels of metallic radionuclides on the one hand, and heterogeneity on the other have up until now formed the bottleneck in our efforts to input speciation data in ...
Maria Rosa Beccia +5 more
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Air and atmosphere studies: Enlightenment, phenomenology and ecocriticism
Abstract This essay examines the treatment of air and atmosphere in literary scholarship of the late 17th‐ to mid‐19th‐century periods, from the first, early Enlightenment discovery of the air's chemical structure and the coining of the word ‘atmosphere’, to the dawning of Victorian industrial pollution.
Rowan Rose Boyson
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Archaeology or interpretation: Michel Foucault and Claude Lefort
Constellations, Volume 29, Issue 4, Page 434-446, December 2022.
Mattia Di Pierro
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