Results for 'Science and industry. '

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  1. Science and industry funding.Manuela Fernández Pinto - 2021 - In Inkeri Koskinen, David Ludwig, Zinhle Mncube, Luana Poliseli & Luis Reyes-Galindo (eds.), Global Epistemologies and Philosophies of Science. New York: Routledge.
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    Are Science and Society Going in the Same Direction?Leo Marx - 1983 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 8 (4):6-9.
    On 4 and 5 April 1983 the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry celebrated its 50th anniversary with an invited conference titled, “Where Are We Going?;—Critical Issues in Science and Technology.” This article is a slightly revised version of Professor Marx's talk given there.—Ed.
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  3.  7
    Science and Industry in the Nineteenth Century. J. D. Bernal.Donald Fleming - 1954 - Isis 45 (4):403-405.
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    Shaping Science and Industry: A History of Australia's Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, 1926-49. C. B. Schedvin. [REVIEW]George H. Bindon - 1991 - Isis 82 (2):396-398.
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    Science and Industry in the Nineteenth Century by J. D. Bernal. [REVIEW]Donald Fleming - 1954 - Isis 45:403-405.
  6.  6
    Science and Technology in the Industrial Revolution.Arnold Thackray - 1970 - History of Science 9 (1):76-89.
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  7.  3
    Science and the state in nineteenth century Prussia: M. Norton Wise: Aesthetics, industry & science. Hermann von Helmholtz and the Berlin Physical Society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018, xxi+405pp, $45, ISBN 978-0-22.35-96-531.Kurt Møller Pedersen - 2020 - Metascience 29 (2):233-235.
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    Undone science: social movements, mobilized publics, and industrial transitions. [REVIEW]David J. Hess - unknown
    Introduction -- Repression, ignorance, and undone science -- The epistemic dimension of the political opportunity structure -- The politics of meaning: from frames to design conflicts -- The organizational forms of counterpublic knowledge -- Institutional change, industrial transitions, and regime resistance politics -- Contemporary change: liberalization and epistemic modernization -- Conclusion.
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  9.  1
    Thomas Schlich. Surgery, Science, and Industry: A Revolution in Fracture Care, 1950s–1990s. xi + 349 pp., illus., bibl., index. New York: Palgrave, 2002. [REVIEW]Augusto Sarmiento - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):752-753.
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  10.  2
    Perceiving Environmental Science, Risk and Industry Regulation in the Mediatised Vicious Cycles of the Tasmanian Salmon Aquaculture Industry.Coco Cullen-Knox, Aysha Fleming, Libby Lester & Emily Ogier - 2021 - Social Epistemology 35 (5):441-460.
    This paper examines public conflict over the rapid growth of the Tasmanian salmon aquaculture industry and associated environmental and social impacts. By conducting a media analysis, triangulated...
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    Riding the Waves: A Life in Sound, Science, and Industry.Leo Leroy Beranek - 2008 - MIT Press.
    The life and work of Renaissance man Leo Beranek: scientist, professor, engineer, busisess leader, inventor, entrepreneur, musician, television executive, philanthropist, and author.
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  12.  3
    Instrumentation: Between Science, State and Industry, Sociology of the Sciences Yearbook.B. Joerges & T. Shinn (eds.) - 2001 - Springer.
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  13.  4
    Making Sense of Science, University, and Industry: Sensemaking Narratives of Finnish and Israeli Scientists.Elina I. Mäkinen & Adi Sapir - 2023 - Minerva 61 (2):175-198.
    Academic entrepreneurship and the commercialization of science have transformed higher education in recent decades. Although there is ample research on the topic, less is known about how individual scientists experience and perceive the transformation. Drawing on a narratological approach to sensemaking, this study examines how entrepreneurial scientists in Finland and Israel make sense of and narrate the perceived changes in the interface between science, university, and industry. An analysis of 53 semi-structured interviews reveals three sensemaking narratives demonstrating how (...)
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    Science in action’: The politics of hands-on display at the New York Museum of Science and Industry.Jaume Sastre-Juan - forthcoming - History of Science:007327531772523.
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  15. The useful war: Radar and the mobilization of science and industry in Japan.Morris F. Low - 2000 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 207:291-302.
     
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  16. Management science and the "second industrial revolution".Mike Hales - 1986 - In Les Levidow (ed.), Radical science essays. Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press.
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  17.  2
    Electrical science and the early development of the electrical manufacturing industry in the United States.Harold C. Passer - 1951 - Annals of Science 7 (4):382-392.
  18.  9
    Science and technology in the Industrial Revolution.Steven Louis Goldman - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (5):653-655.
  19.  11
    Medical Science and Medical Industry: The Formation of the American Pharmaceutical Industry. Jonathan Liebenau.John P. Swann - 1988 - Isis 79 (3):521-523.
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  20.  9
    Conceptualizing Knowledge Used in Innovation: A Second Look at the Science-Technology Distinction and Industrial Innovation.Wendy Faulkner - 1994 - Science, Technology and Human Values 19 (4):425-458.
    This article reviews empirical and conceptual material from two distinct research traditions: on the science-technology relation and on industrial innovation. It aims both to shed new light on an old debate—the distinction between scientific and technological knowledge—and to refine our conceptualizations of the knowledge used by companies in the course of research and development leading to innovation. On the basis of three empirical studies, a composite categorization of different types of knowledge used in innovation is proposed, as part of (...)
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  21.  7
    Riding the Waves: A Life in Sound, Science, and Industry; Manhattan Project to the Santa Fe Institute: The Memoirs of George A. Cowan. [REVIEW]William Thomas - 2011 - Isis 102:581-582.
    Riding the Waves: A Life in Sound, Science, and IndustryManhattan Project to the Santa Fe Institute: The Memoirs of George A. Cowan by Leo Beranek; George A. Cowan.
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  22.  8
    Science and power: Francoist Spain (1939–1975) as a case study.Antoni Malet - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (1-2):111-132.
    This paper takes Franco's Spain to be a powerful case study for analyzing the ways in which power shapes science and technology and is shaped by them in return. Spain was the last country in Western Europe to establish closer links with any of the international cooperative institutions emerging after WWII. As such, developments internal to Spanish society were quite autonomous and relatively free from foreign influences. The paper focuses first on the brand new, powerful institution that the Francoist (...)
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  23.  4
    Can Science Feed on a Crisis? Expectations, the Pine Institute, and the Decline of the French Resin Industry.Marcin Krasnodębski - 2017 - Science in Context 30 (1):61-87.
    ArgumentWhile science and economy are undoubtedly interwoven, the nature of their relationship is often reduced to a positive correlation between economic and scientific prosperity. It seems that the modern scholarship focusing on “success stories” tends to neglect counterintuitive examples such as the impact of economic crises on research. We argue that economic difficulties, under certain circumstances, may also lead to the prosperous development of scientific institutions. This paper focuses on a particular organism, the Pine Institute in Bordeaux in France. (...)
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  24.  2
    Science and Philosophy : And Other Essays.Bernard Bosanquet - 1927 - Freeport, N.Y.,: Routledge.
    First published in 1927, _Science and Philosophy: And Other Essays_ is a collection of individual papers written by Bernard Bosanquet during his highly industrious philosophical life. The collection was put together by Bosanquet’s wife after the death of the writer and remains mostly unaltered with just a few papers added and the order of entries improved. The papers here displayed consist of various contributions Bosanquet made to _Mind_, the _Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society_, the _International Journal of Ethics_ and other (...)
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  25.  11
    Science and the production of ignorance: when the quest for knowledge is thwarted.Janet A. Kourany & Martin Carrier (eds.) - 2020 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    An introduction to the new area of ignorance studies that examines how science produces ignorance—both actively and passively, intentionally and unintentionally. We may think of science as our foremost producer of knowledge, but for the past decade, science has also been studied as an important source of ignorance. The historian of science Robert Proctor has coined the term agnotology to refer to the study of ignorance, and much of the ignorance studied in this new area is (...)
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  26.  2
    Christopher R. Henke: Cultivating Science, Harvesting Power: Science and Industrial Agriculture in California: The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2008, 226 pp. ISBN978-0-262-08373-7. [REVIEW]William H. Friedland - 2010 - Agriculture and Human Values 27 (1):111-112.
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  27.  2
    Iris Runge: A Life at the Crossroads of Mathematics, Science, and Industry. [REVIEW]I. Grattan-Guinness - 2014 - Annals of Science 71 (2):294-295.
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    Science and Technology in the Industrial Revolution. [REVIEW]J. Smith - 1971 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (3):296-297.
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  29.  10
    Science for Industry: A Short History of the Imperial College of Science and Technology and Its Antecedents. By A. Rupert Hall. [REVIEW]Robert Kargon - 1984 - Isis 75 (1):213-213.
  30.  6
    Christopher R. Henke. Cultivating Science, Harvesting Power: Science and Industrial Agriculture in California. xi + 226 pp., illus., bibl., index. Cambridge, Mass./London: MIT Press, 2008. $32. [REVIEW]Paolo Palladino - 2010 - Isis 101 (1):257-258.
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  31.  4
    Leo Beranek. Riding the Waves: A Life in Sound, Science, and Industry. x + 230 pp., figs. Cambridge, Mass./London: MIT Press, 2008. $24.95 .George A. Cowan. Manhattan Project to the Santa Fe Institute: The Memoirs of George A. Cowan. 175 pp., illus., index. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2010. $18.50. [REVIEW]William Thomas - 2011 - Isis 102 (3):581-582.
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    The Lunar Society of Birmingham; A Social History of Provincial Science and Industry in Eighteenth-century England. By Robert E. Schofield. Pp. x + 491. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963. 70s. net. [REVIEW]Trevor Williams - 1965 - British Journal for the History of Science 2 (4):361-362.
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  33.  4
    Science for Industry: A Short History of the Imperial College of Science and Technology and Its Antecedents by A. Rupert Hall. [REVIEW]Robert Kargon - 1984 - Isis 75:213-213.
  34.  8
    Science and Civilisation in China. Volume 6: Biology and Biological Technology. Part 3: Agro-Industries: Sugarcane Technology. Agro-Industries and Forestry by Joseph Needham; Christian Daniels; Nicholas K. Menzies. [REVIEW]Charles Peterson - 1998 - Isis 89:333-334.
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  35. The Moral Economy of a Miracle Drug : On Exchange Relationships Between Medical Science and the Pharmaceutical Industry in the 1940s.Christer Nordlund - 2015 - In Isabelle Dussauge, Claes-Fredrik Helgesson & Francis Lee (eds.), Value practices in the life sciences and medicine. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
     
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  36.  12
    Epistemic diversity and industrial selection bias.Manuela Fernández Pinto & Daniel Fernández Pinto - 2023 - Synthese 201 (5):1-18.
    Philosophers of science have argued that epistemic diversity is an asset for the production of scientific knowledge, guarding against the effects of biases, among other advantages. The growing privatization of scientific research, on the contrary, has raised important concerns for philosophers of science, especially with respect to the growing sources of biases in research that it seems to promote. Recently, Holman and Bruner ( 2017 ) have shown, using a modified version of Zollman ( 2010 ) social network (...)
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  37.  12
    Constitutional Moments in Governing Science and Technology.Sheila Jasanoff - 2011 - Science and Engineering Ethics 17 (4):621-638.
    Scholars in science and technology studies (STS) have recently been called upon to advise governments on the design of procedures for public engagement. Any such instrumental function should be carried out consistently with STS’s interpretive and normative obligations as a social science discipline. This article illustrates how such threefold integration can be achieved by reviewing current US participatory politics against a 70-year backdrop of tacit constitutional developments in governing science and technology. Two broad cycles of constitutional adjustment (...)
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  38.  4
    Chemistry and industrial and environmental governance in France, 1770–1830.Thomas Le Roux - 2016 - History of Science 54 (2):195-222.
    This article examines how chemists contributed to the technological reorganization in France at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth century, how they justified using potentially harmful or polluting processes by stating that this would contribute to national prosperity, and how the idea of improvement helped to legally and rhetorically build a production regime that disqualified traditional precautionary attitudes to certain artisanal and industrial processes. This resulted in the establishment of a new environmental governance regime (...)
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  39.  6
    Taming Unruly Science and Saving National Competitiveness: Discourses on Science by Sweden’s Strategic Research Bodies.Merle Jacob & Tomas Hellström - 2005 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 30 (4):443-467.
    Promoting collaboration between university researchers and practitioners from the business and public sectors has emerged as an important tool of science policy. This article examines the discourses that policy makers employ in promoting this strategy by analyzing the narratives about the social relevance of science and its role vis-à-vis the industrial sector in the context of strategic research funding in Sweden. Four dominant discourses on science are identified and discussed. It is argued that these policy frames construct (...)
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  40.  15
    Dual Use Science and Technology, Ethics and Weapons of Mass Destruction.Seumas Miller - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book deals with the problem of dual-use science research and technology. It first explains the concept of dual use and then offers analyses of collective knowledge and collective ignorance. It goes on to present a theory of collective responsibility, followed by four chapters focusing on a particular scientific field or industry of dual use concern: the chemical industry, the nuclear industry, cyber-technology and the biological sciences. The problem of dual-use science research and technology arises because such research (...)
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  41.  8
    Marx and Industrial Age Aesthetics of Alienation.Dale Jacquette - 2016 - Cultura 13 (1):89-105.
    Karl Marx’s socio-economic analysis of capitalism and the conditions of industrial production are meant to imply the competitive alienation of workers in at least two important senses: Workers are alienated from their tools and materials because under capitalism they generally do not own, develop or cultivate the means of production or market for products themselves; and Workers are alienated from one another in competitive isolation prior to the evolution of assembly-line production in the classical progression of capitalist manufacturing. The present (...)
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    Women Inventors in Context: Disparities in Patenting across Academia and Industry.Laurel Smith-Doerr & Kjersten Bunker Whittington - 2008 - Gender and Society 22 (2):194-218.
    Explanations of productivity differences between men and women in science tend to focus on the academic sector and the individual level. This article examines how variation in organizational logic affects sex differences in scientists' commercial productivity, as measured by patenting. Using detailed data from a sample of academic and industrial life scientists working in the United States, the authors present multivariate regression models of scientific patenting. The data show that controlling for education- and career-history variables, women are less likely (...)
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  43.  9
    Beyond the Boundary: Science, Industry, and Managing Symbiosis.Birgitte Gorm Hansen - 2011 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 31 (6):493-505.
    –Whether celebratory or critical, STS research on science-industry relations has focused on the blurring of boundaries and hybridization of codes and practices. However, the vocabulary of boundary and hybrid tends to reify science and industry as separate in the attempt to map their relation. Drawing on interviews with the head of a research center in plant biology, this article argues that biology and biotech are symbionts. In order to be viable and productive, symbiosis needs to be carefully managed (...)
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  44.  3
    Occupational Health and Industrial Wind Turbines: A Case Study.Carmen M. E. Krogh, Stephen E. Ambrose & Robert W. Rand - 2011 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 31 (5):359-362.
    Industrial wind turbines (IWTs) are being installed at a fast pace globally. Researchers, medical practitioners, and media have reported adverse health effects resulting from living in the environs of IWTs. While there have been some anecdotal reports from technicians and other workers who work in the environs of IWTs, little is known about the occupational health sector. The purpose of this case study is to raise awareness about the potential for adverse health effects occurring among workers. The authors propose that (...)
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  45.  11
    Mind the Gap: Formal Ethics Policies and Chemical Scientists’ Everyday Practices in Academia and Industry.Itai Vardi & Laurel Smith-Doerr - 2015 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 40 (2):176-198.
    Asymmetrical convergence is the increasing overlap between academic and industrial sectors, but with academia moving closer toward for-profit industrial norms than vice versa. Although this concept, developed by Kleinman and Vallas, is useful, processes of asymmetrical convergence in daily laboratory life are largely unexplored. Here, observations of three lab groups of chemical scientists in academic and industry contexts illustrate variation in interactions with ethics-related policies. Findings show more tension for academic science with business-based practices, such as the move toward (...)
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  46.  6
    Strongly Participatory Science and Knowledge Justice in an Environmentally Contested Region.Barbara L. Allen - 2018 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 43 (6):947-971.
    This article draws insights from a case study examining unanswered health questions of residents in two polluted towns in an industrial region in southern France. A participatory health study, as conducted by the author, is presented as a way to address undone science by providing the residents with relevant data supporting their illness claims. Local residents were included in the health survey process, from the formulation of the questions to the final data analysis. Through this strongly participatory science (...)
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  47.  4
    Science and Technology Ethics.Dr Raymond E. Spier & Raymond E. Spier - 2001 - Routledge.
    Science and Technology Ethics re-examines the ethics by which we live and asks the question: do we have in place the ethical guidelines through which we can incorporate these developments with the minimum of disruption and disaffection? It assesses the ethical systems in place and proposes new approaches to our scientific and engineering processes and products, our social contacts, biology and informatics, the military industry and our environmental responsibilities. The volume is multidisciplinary and reflects the aim of the book (...)
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  48.  23
    Ethics for science and engineering based international industries: A collection of papers from a conference held under the auspices of the Engineering Foundation on September 14–17 1997, at Durham, North Carolina, USA. [REVIEW]Steven P. Nichols, Carl M. Skooglund & Raymond E. Spier - 1998 - Science and Engineering Ethics 4 (3):259-261.
  49.  14
    Leadership in Science and Technology: A Reference Handbook.William Sims Bainbridge (ed.) - 2012 - SAGE.
    "This 2-volume set within the SAGE Reference Series on Leadership tackles issues relevant to leadership in the realm of science and technology. To encompass the key topics in this arena, this handbook features 100 topics arranged under eight headings. Volume 1 concentrates on general principles of science and technology leadership and includes sections on social-scientific perspectives on S&T leadership; key scientific concepts about leading and innovating in S&T; characteristics of S&T leaders and their environments; and strategies, tactics, and (...)
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  50.  4
    Philosophy and Industrial Life.J. Clark Murray - 1894 - The Monist 4 (4):533-544.
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