Results for 'A. Nordmann'

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  1. Philosophierende Forscher.A. Schwarz & A. Nordmann (eds.) - 2009 - Alber.
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  2. Science in the Context of Application.M. Carrier & A. Nordmann (eds.) - 2011 - Springer.
     
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  3. Nanotechnologie im Kontext: Philosophische, ethische und gesellschaftliche Perspektiven.A. Nordmann & J. Schummer (eds.) - 2006 - Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft.
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  4.  69
    Cat Got Your Tongue? Using the Tip‐of‐the‐Tongue State to Investigate Fixed Expressions.Emily Nordmann, Alexandra A. Cleland & Rebecca Bull - 2013 - Cognitive Science 37 (8):1553-1564.
    Despite the fact that they play a prominent role in everyday speech, the representation and processing of fixed expressions during language production is poorly understood. Here, we report a study investigating the processes underlying fixed expression production. “Tip-of-the-tongue” (TOT) states were elicited for well-known idioms (e.g., hit the nail on the head) and participants were asked to report any information they could regarding the content of the phrase. Participants were able to correctly report individual words for idioms that they could (...)
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  5. Allen, B., Truth in Philosophy, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1993, xi, 230, US $29.95 (cloth). Anderson, E., Value in Ethics and Economics, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1993, xiv, 245, US $35.00 (coth). Armstrong, D., A Materialist Theory of the Mind, London, Routledge, 1993 [1968], xxiii, 375. [REVIEW]J. Kiagge, A. Nordmann, K. I. Manktelow & De Over - 1994 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (2).
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  6.  17
    Ideas for a philosophy of nature as introduction to the study of this science Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, trans. Errol E. Harris and Peter Heath, intro. Robert Stern , xxvi + 294 pp., $49.50, cloth; $15.95, paper. [REVIEW]A. Nordmann - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (4):566-568.
  7.  9
    Corona Perspectives – Philosophical Lessons from a Pandemic.Yongmou Liu, Carl Mitcham & Alfred Nordmann - 2021 - In Alexander Friedrich, Petra Gehring, Christoph Hubig, Andreas Kaminski & Alfred Nordmann (eds.), Konfigurationen der Zeitlichkeit: Jahrbuch Technikphilosophie 2021. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft Mbh & Co. Kg. pp. 304-307.
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  8.  11
    Grammaire wittgensteinienne et phénoménologie husserlienne : de leurs puissances et de leurs limites respectives, de leur possible conjonction.Jean-François Nordmann - 2000 - Rue Descartes 29:97-115.
    Au-delà de leurs différences évidentes, des similitudes et convergences fondamentales peuvent être marquées entre l'entreprise grammatical wittgensteinienne et l'entreprise phénoménologique husserlienne: le commun problème de départ épistémologique et sceptique, le développement d'analyses transcendantales généralisées et systématisées, la radicalisation de la conscience anti-fondationniste et anti-métaphysique, l'évaluation philosophique fondamentale d'arbitraire et de facticité, la constitution d'un ample espace de redescription de l'ensemble de notre vie et de notre expérience. A l'intérieur de ce cadre commun, on peut comparer l'extension et la compréhension respectives (...)
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  9.  62
    Reasoning in Measurement.Nicola Mößner & Alfred Nordmann (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    This collection offers a new understanding of the epistemology of measurement. The interdisciplinary volume explores how measurements are produced, for example, in astronomy and seismology, in studies of human sexuality and ecology, in brain imaging and intelligence testing. It considers photography as a measurement technology and Henry David Thoreau's poetic measures as closing the gap between mind and world. -/- By focusing on measurements as the hard-won results of conceptual as well as technical operations the authors of the book no (...)
  10.  54
    Facts-well-put.Davis Baird & Alfred Nordmann - 1994 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 45 (1):37-77.
    In this paper we elucidate a particular type of instrument. Striking-phenomenon instruments assume their striking profile against the shifting backdrop of theoretical uncertainties. While technologically stable, the phenomena produced by these instruments are linguistically fuzzy, subject to a variety of conceptual representations. But in virtue of their technological stability alone, they can provide a foundation for further technological as well as conceptual development. Sometimes, as in the case of the pulse glass, the phenomenon is taken to confirm conflicting theoretical views; (...)
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  11. Science Transformed?: Debating Claims of an Epochal Break.Alfred Nordmann, Hans Radder & Gregor Schiemann (eds.) - 2011 - University of Pittsburgh Press.
    Advancements in computing, instrumentation, robotics, digital imaging, and simulation modeling have changed science into a technology-driven institution. Government, industry, and society increasingly exert their influence over science, raising questions of values and objectivity. These and other profound changes have led many to speculate that we are in the midst of an epochal break in scientific history. -/- This edited volume presents an in-depth examination of these issues from philosophical, historical, social, and cultural perspectives. It offers arguments both for and against (...)
  12.  17
    Liu, Dachun, Wang Bolu, Ding Junqiang, and Liu Yongmu, Reconsideration of Science and Technology I: Reflection on Marx’s View.Carl Mitcham & Alfred Nordmann - 2024 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 23 (2):315-329.
  13.  89
    “Hier bin ich Mensch, hier darf ich’s sein!”—Partaking in the Nanoworld.Astrid Schwarz & Alfred Nordmann - 2011 - NanoEthics 5 (2):233-243.
    Images from the nanoworld are not at all disorienting or bewildering, as one might expect from contemplating the strange and surprising features that arise where classical physics comes to an end and quantum effects begin to appear. Instead, we see the traces of explorers in a world that appears to be infinitely malleable. The paper shows that the capability to visualize processes and phenomena at the nanoscale is a matter not only of research technologies and the advancement of observational techniques, (...)
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  14. If and then: A critique of speculative nanoethics. [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann - 2007 - NanoEthics 1 (1):31-46.
    Most known technology serves to ingeniously adapt the world to the physical and mental limitations of human beings. Humankind has acquired awesome power with its rather limited means. Nanotechnological capabilities further this power. On some accounts, however, nanotechnological research will contribute to a rather different kind of technological development, namely one that changes human beings so as to remove or reduce their physical and mental limitations. The prospect of this technological development has inspired a fair amount of ethical debate. Here, (...)
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  15.  3
    Nanotechnology.Alfred Nordmann - 2009 - In Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis, Stig Andur Pedersen & Vincent F. Hendricks (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Technology. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 511–516.
  16. Philosophical Occasions: 1912-1951.James Klagge & Alfred Nordmann (eds.) - 1993 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    An essential resource for students of Wittgenstein, this collection contains faithful, in some cases expanded and corrected, versions of many important pieces never before available in a single volume, including Notes for the 'Philosophical Lecture', published here for the first time. Fifteen selections, with bi-lingual versions of those originally written in German, span the development of Wittgenstein's thought, his range of interests, and his methods of philosophical investigation. Short introductions, an index, and an updated version of Georg Henrik von Wright's (...)
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  17.  6
    Research Objects in Their Technological Setting.Alfred Nordmann & Bernadette Bensaude Vincent (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    What kind of stuff is the world made of? What is the nature or substance of things? These are ontological questions, and they are usually answered with respect to the objects of science. The objects of technoscience tell a different story that concerns the power, promise and potential of things - not what they are but what they can be. Seventeen scholars from history and philosophy of science, epistemology, social anthropology, cultural studies and ethics each explore a research object in (...)
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  18. Darwinians at war Bateson's place in histories of Darwinism.Alfred Nordmann - 1992 - Synthese 91 (1-2):53 - 72.
    The controversy between Biometricians and Mendelians has been called an inexplicable embarrassment since it revolved around the mistaken identification of Mendelian genetics with non-Darwinian saltationism, a mistake traced back to the non-Darwinian William Bateson, who introduced Mendelian analysis to British science. The following paper beings to unravel this standard account of the controversy by raising a simple question: Given that Bateson embraced evolution by natural selection and that he studied the causes of variation within a broadly Darwinian framework of problems (...)
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  19.  61
    Object lessons: towards an epistemology of technoscience.Alfred Nordmann - 2012 - Scientiae Studia 10 (SPE):11-31.
    Discussions of technoscience are bringing to light that scientific journals feature very different knowledge claims. At one end of the spectrum, there is the scientific claim that a hypothesis needs to be reevaluated in light of new evidence. At the other end of the spectrum, there is the technoscientific claim that some new measure of control has been achieved in a laboratory. The latter claim has not received sufficient attention as of yet. In what sense is the achievement of control (...)
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  20.  10
    A systematic review of non-motor rTMS induced motor cortex plasticity.Grégory Nordmann, Valeriya Azorina, Berthold Langguth & Martin Schecklmann - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  21.  36
    Knots and strands: An argument for productive disillusionment.Alfred Nordmann - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (3):217 – 236.
    This article offers a contrast between European and US-American approaches to the convergence of enabling technologies and to associated issues. It identifies an apparently paradoxical situation in which regional differences produce conflicting claims to universality, each telling us what can and will happen to the benefit of humanity. Those who might mediate and negotiate these competing claims are themselves entangled in the various positions. A possible solution is offered, namely a universalizable strategy that aims to disentangle premature claims to unity (...)
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  22.  15
    A Feeling for the Work as a Limited Whole.Alfred Nordmann - 2018 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 22 (3):334-351.
    This is a paper, on the face of it, about Wittgenstein’s Tractatus and its contribution to the philosophy of technology. As such, it advances a three-fold claim: Especially the early Wittgenstein was not a philosopher of technology. Though he does not recognize philosophical problems of technology—for example, of engineering knowledge—he is keenly aware of the limits of philosophy. Thus, he inadvertently opens up a perspective for the philosophy of technology, after all. By drawing out the implications of this perspective for (...)
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  23. The Human Condition: More than a guide to practical philosophy.Ingeborg Nordmann - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 74 (3):777-796.
    A political philosophy that no longer wants to be a philosophy inevitably runs into contradictions. The productive transparency of Arendt's philosophical experiment becomes visible, however, if we avoid simple mappings to Aristotle, Kant and Heidegger in order to emphasize the point and counterpoint of Arendt's message. The connections she draws, unusual in the world of philosophical thinking, have an obvious and a hidden side. The hidden side can be frequently found in the nuances, and these will be pursued inasmuch as (...)
     
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  24.  79
    Invisible origins of nanotechnology: Herbert gleiter, materials science, and questions of prestige.Alfred Nordmann - 2009 - Perspectives on Science 17 (2):pp. 123-143.
    Herbert Gleiter promoted the development of nanostructured materials on a variety of levels. In 1981 already, he formulated research visions and produced experimental as well as theoretical results. Still he is known only to a small community of materials scientists. That this is so is itself a telling feature of the imagined community of nanoscale research. After establishing the plausibility of the claim that Herbert Gleiter provided a major impetus, a second step will show just how deeply Gleiter shaped (and (...)
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  25.  2
    The Challenge of a “Paradoxology”.Sophie Nordmann - 2024 - Philosophy Today 68 (2):401-414.
    This article takes as its starting point the central place given to contradiction by Hermann Goldschmidt in his book Contradiction Set Free, and it compares his approach with that of the philosopher Vladimir Jankélévitch. At the same time as Goldschmidt, Jankélévitch also assigned a central role to contradiction in thought, so much so that he often referred to his own philosophical method as “paradoxology.” For him, as for Goldschmidt, paradox is the driving force behind thought that is always on the (...)
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  26.  15
    Ideas for a philosophy of nature as introduction to the study of this science.Alfred Nordmann - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (4):566-568.
  27.  14
    Im Blickwinkel der Technik: Neue Verhältnisse von Wissenschaftstheorie und Wissenschaftsgeschichte.Alfred Nordmann - 2012 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 35 (3):200-216.
    Changing Perspectives – From the Experimental to the Technological Turn in History and Philosophy of Science. In the 1960s the philosophy of science was transformed through the encounter with the history of science, resulting in a collaborative venture by the name of “History and Philosophy of Science” (HPS). Philosophy of science adopted ever more regularly the format of the case study to reconstruct certain episodes from the history of science, and historians were mostly interested in the production of scientific knowledge. (...)
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  28.  31
    De la transmission des savoirs à la formation des compétences : une hypothèse sur l'École et son besoin actuel de mutation.Jean-François Nordmann - 2012 - Rue Descartes 73 (1):66.
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  29.  5
    Quand « le pressentiment des prophètes s’allie à la réalité de l’Empire » (« Globus ») : F. Rosenzweig et la question théologico-politique.Sophie Nordmann - 2011 - Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 29:123-134.
    Étant donné la priorité d’intérêt que ce volume entend donner aux textes écrits par Rosenzweig en 1917, alors qu’il se trouvait sur le front des Balkans, j’ai choisi de me pencher sur les tout premiers paragraphes du texte intitulé « Globus. Études sur la théorie de l’espace dans l’histoire universelle », et de mettre ces lignes en regard de ce que Rosenzweig développe dans L’Étoile de la Rédemption. C’est donc d’une lecture suivie de l’introduction de « Globus » dont je (...)
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  30.  60
    A forensics of wishing: technology assessment in the age of technoscience. [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann - 2010 - Poiesis and Praxis 7 (1-2):5-15.
    If one considers the Collingridge dilemma to be a dilemma awaiting a solution, one has implicitly abandoned a genuinely historical conception of the future and adopted instead a notion of the future as an object of technical design, the realisation of technical possibility or as wish-fulfilment. The definition of technology assessment (TA) as a successful response to the Collingridge dilemma renders it a technoscience that shares with all the others the conceit of being able, supposedly, to shape the future. An (...)
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  31.  22
    Comparing incommensurable theories.Alfred Nordmann - 1986 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 17 (2):231-246.
  32.  4
    BioTechnology as BioParody – Strategies for Salience.Alfred Nordmann - 2021 - Perspectives on Science 29 (5):568-582.
    Whether “biomimetic” or “bioinspired,” the projects of bioengineering tend to refer their devices or inventions to the biological systems that provide models or originals for detachable functionalities. And yet, they do not satisfy the picturing relation of original and copy. They are mimetic or imitative in the sense of reenacting a function in a different setting with its own principles of composition or its own parameters that select for salience. The taking up of salient features for the purposes of producing (...)
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  33.  31
    Das Gefühl der Welt als begrenztes Ganzes: Sachlichkeit.Alfred Nordmann - 2014 - Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 2014 (1):89-99.
    It requires objectivity to acquire scientific knowledge of facts, it requires Sachlich­keit or a feeling for the mechanism to acquire technical knowledge of how things work together in a system or device. Each of these epistemic ideals is normatively charged but only the notion of scientific objectivity considers knowledge production as a historical process. And while scientific objectivity served as an ideal for communicative rationality in an open and democratic society, Sachlichkeit underwrites the search for innovative solutions in contemporary knowledge (...)
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  34.  88
    Establishing commensurability: Intercalation, global meaning and the unity of science.Alfred Nordmann - 1999 - Perspectives on Science 7 (2):181-195.
    : In the face of disunification and incommensurability, how can the scientific community maintain itself and establish commensurability? According to Peter Galison's investigations of twentieth-century microphysics, commensurability is achieved through local coordination even in the absence of global meaning: The "strength and coherence" of science is due to diverse, yet coordinated action in trading zones between theorists and experimenters, experimenters and instrument builders, etc. Galison's claim is confronted with Georg Christoph Lichtenberg's establishment of commensurability between unitarians and dualists in the (...)
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  35.  25
    Goodbye and farewell: Siegel vs. Feyerabend.Alfred Nordmann - 1990 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 33 (3):317 – 331.
    In his review (Inquiry 32 [1989], pp. 343?69) of Paul Feyerabend's Farewell to Reason, Harvey Siegel makes a fairly simple point: Feyerabend provides a bad argument for a good cause. In particular, Siegel maintains that the argument suffers, first, from self?inflicted depreciation: having been rendered impotent by Feyerabend's views of objectivity and rationality, what claim to persuasion can his argument possibly hold? And second, the argument is said to be incoherent: instead of respecting and leaving alone diverse cultures and traditions (...)
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  36.  19
    Judaïsme et paganisme chez Cohen, Rosenzweig et Levinas.Sophie Nordmann - 2007 - Archives de Philosophie 2 (2):227-247.
    Cet article met en évidence la manière dont H. Cohen, F. Rosenzweig et E. Levinas inaugurent, dans un même geste spéculatif, une forme nouvelle de « philosophie de la religion », où la religion ne constitue plus seulement un objet, mais un moteur de la rationalité philosophique. Chez chacun d’eux, ce geste passe par l’opposition du paganisme et du judaïsme, qui se prolonge dans l’opposition entre une tradition philosophique enfermée dans l’immanence, et une forme de rationalité philosophique nouvelle, qui s’ouvre (...)
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  37.  2
    Judaïsme et paganisme chez Cohen, Rosenzweig et Levinas.Sophie Nordmann - 2007 - Archives de Philosophie 70 (2):227-247.
    Cet article met en évidence la manière dont H. Cohen, F. Rosenzweig et E. Levinas inaugurent, dans un même geste spéculatif, une forme nouvelle de « philosophie de la religion », où la religion ne constitue plus seulement un objet, mais un moteur de la rationalité philosophique. Chez chacun d’eux, ce geste passe par l’opposition du paganisme et du judaïsme, qui se prolonge dans l’opposition entre une tradition philosophique enfermée dans l’immanence, et une forme de rationalité philosophique nouvelle, qui s’ouvre (...)
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  38.  14
    L’Étoile de la Rédemption : « livre juif » ou « système philosophique »?Sophie Nordmann - 2019 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 129 (2):283-297.
    Dans son article « La pensée nouvelle », paru en 1925, Franz Rosenzweig affirme à propos de L’Étoile de la rédemption, qu’il ne s’agit pas d’un « livre juif » mais d’un « système philosophique ». Il revient pourtant, quelques pages plus loin, sur cette affirmation, pour déclarer cette fois qu’« il s’agit bien d’un livre juif ». Comment comprendre le sens de ces deux affirmations de prime abord antithétiques? En quel sens L’Étoile peut‑elle, à la fois, être et n’être (...)
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  39.  4
    NanoTechnoScience for Philosophers of Science.Alfred Nordmann - 2019 - Philosophia Scientiae 23:99-119.
    Au cours des dernières décennies, la philosophie des sciences est devenue la philosophie des sciences particulières. En conséquence, certaines des questions majeures de la philosophie des sciences sont adressées à la recherche en nanosciences et technologie. C’est le cas notamment des questions concernant la nature de la connaissance, le rôle de la théorie, les pratiques expérimentales et observationnelles. Ces questions habituelles suscitent des réponses inattendues, suggérant que la nanotechnoscience est un exemple non pas d’une science mais d’une technoscience.
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  40.  19
    NanoTechnoScience for Philosophers of Science.Alfred Nordmann - 2019 - Philosophia Scientiae 23:99-119.
    Au cours des dernières décennies, la philosophie des sciences est devenue la philosophie des sciences particulières. En conséquence, certaines des questions majeures de la philosophie des sciences sont adressées à la recherche en nanosciences et technologie. C’est le cas notamment des questions concernant la nature de la connaissance, le rôle de la théorie, les pratiques expérimentales et observationnelles. Ces questions habituelles suscitent des réponses inattendues, suggérant que la nanotechnoscience est un exemple non pas d’une science mais d’une technoscience.
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  41.  4
    Phénoménologie de la transcendance: création, révélation, rédemption.Sophie Nordmann - 2012 - Dol de Bretagne: Éditions d'écarts.
    Toute phénoménologie, par définition, part de et en reste au monde tel qu'il s'offre à la conscience. Une "phénoménologie de la transcendance" semble donc une entreprise impossible, puisqu'il s'agirait de chercher dans l'expérience du monde "quelque chose" qui ne puisse en aucune manière que ce soit être rapporté au monde. L'expression de "phénoménologie de la transcendance" est ainsi formellement contradictoire: car si la transcendance était "phénomène", et pouvait faire l'objet d'une "-logie", d'une saisie par le logos, elle serait précisément de (...)
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  42.  2
    The Evolutionary Analysis: Apparent Error, Certified Belief, and the Defects of Asymmetry.Alfred Nordmann - 1994 - Perspectives on Science 2 (2):131-175.
    This article scrutinizes in detail much of the extant historiography on the controversy between biometricians and Mendelians, considering in particular how this controversy is related to the evolutionary synthesis. While the historiographic critique concentrates on William Provine’s standard account, it also extends to the proposal by Donald MacKenzie and Barry Barnes. What Provine and these sociologists of scientific knowledge have in common is a set of unquestioned assumptions about the nature of Darwinism, about William Bateson’s anti-Darwinism, and about the very (...)
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  43.  74
    Another parting of the ways: Intersubjectivity and the objectivity of science.Alfred Nordmann - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 43 (1):38-46.
  44.  16
    Heinrich Hertz: Scientific Biography and Experimental Life.Alfred Nordmann - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (3):537-549.
  45.  53
    Beyond conversation: Some lessons for nanoethics. [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann - 2010 - NanoEthics 4 (2):171-181.
    One of the aims of the DEEPEN project was to deepen ethical understanding of issues related to emerging nanotechnologies through an interdisciplinary approach utilizing insights from philosophy, ethics, and the social sciences. Accordingly, part of its final report was dedicated to the question of what was accomplished with regards to this aim and what further research is required. It relates two insights: Nanotechnologies intensify the ambivalence of ongoing, long-term developments; and yet, our intuitions and received story-lines fail us as a (...)
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  46.  29
    Technology Assessment of Socio-Technical Futures—A Discussion Paper.Andreas Lösch, Knud Böhle, Christopher Coenen, Paulina Dobroc, Reinhard Heil, Armin Grunwald, Dirk Scheer, Christoph Schneider, Arianna Ferrari, Dirk Hommrich, Martin Sand, Stefan C. Aykut, Sascha Dickel, Daniela Fuchs, Karen Kastenhofer, Helge Torgersen, Bruno Gransche, Alexandra Hausstein, Kornelia Konrad, Alfred Nordmann, Petra Schaper-Rinkel, Ingo Schulz-Schaeffer & Alexander Wentland - 2019 - In Andreas Lösch, Armin Grunwald, Martin Meister & Ingo Schulz-Schaeffer (eds.), Socio-Technical Futures Shaping the Present: Empirical Examples and Analytical Challenges. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden. pp. 285-308.
    Problem: Visions of technology, future scenarios, guiding visions represent imaginations of future states of affairs that play a functional role in processes of technological research, development and innovation—e.g. as a means to create attention, communication, coordination, or for the strategic exertion of influence. Since a couple of years there is a growing attention for such imaginations of futures in politics, the economy, research and the civil society. This trend concerns technology assessment as an observer of these processes and a consultant (...)
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  47.  41
    Persistent propensities: Portrait of a familiar controversy. [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann - 1990 - Biology and Philosophy 5 (4):379-399.
    Susan Mills and John Beatty's propensity interpretation of fitness encountered very different philosophical criticisms by Alexander Rosenberg and Kenneth Waters. These criticisms and the rejoinders to them are both predictable and important. They are predictable as raisingkinds of issues typically associated with disposition concepts (this is established through a systematic review of the problems generated by Carnap's dispositional interpretation of all scientific terms). They are important as referring the resolution of these issues to the development of evolutionary biology. This historical (...)
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  48.  59
    Engaging Narratives and the Limits of Lay Ethics: Introduction. [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann & Phil Macnaghten - 2010 - NanoEthics 4 (2):133-140.
    How can one discover the ethical issues associated with nanotechnologies? One heuristic is to tend closely to the ethical reflections of lay publics and the ways in which these are informed by experience with technological innovation, technology governance, and the (broken) promises of visionary science and technology. A close collaboration between social scientists and philosophers took this heuristic to its limits: On the one hand, it achieved remarkably fine–grained insights into public reflection about nanotechnologies. On the other hand, a philosophical (...)
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  49. Matters of Interest: The Objects of Research in Science and Technoscience. [REVIEW]Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent, Sacha Loeve, Alfred Nordmann & Astrid Schwarz - 2011 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 42 (2):365-383.
    This discussion paper proposes that a meaningful distinction between science and technoscience can be found at the level of the objects of research. Both notions intermingle in the attitudes, intentions, programs and projects of researchers and research institutions—that is, on the side of the subjects of research. But the difference between science and technoscience becomes more explicit when research results are presented in particular settings and when the objects of research are exhibited for the specific interest they hold. When an (...)
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  50.  31
    A history of the ideas of theoretical physics: Essays on the 19th and 20th century physics (Vol. 213 of Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science). [REVIEW]Alfred Nordmann - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 34 (4):677-679.
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