9783593509778: Weak Knowledge: Forms, Functions, and Dynamics: 4

Sinossi

Many of us view the world of science as a firm bastion of knowledge, with each new discovery and further illumination adding to an unshakable foundation of natural truths. Weak Knowledge aims to rattle our faith, not in core certainties of scientific findings but in their strength as accessible resources. The authors show how, throughout history, many bodies of research have become precarious due to a host of factors. These factors have included cultural or social disinterest, feeble empirical evidence or theoretical justifications, and a lack of practical applications in a given field’s findings. This book brings together cases from a range of historical periods and disciplines, ranging from personal medicine to climatology, to illuminate the specific forms, functions, and dynamics of so-called “weak” bodies of knowledge.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Moritz Epple is professor of the history of science at Goethe University, Frankfurt. Annette Imhausen is professor of the history of science at Goethe University, Frankfurt. Falk Müller is professor at Goethe University, Frankfurt.

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Preface
The present volume collects contributions to a conference held in Frankfurt/Main on 2-4 July 2017, contributions which have been re-worked after intense exchanges both during and following the conference. They pursue a common objective: to re-evaluate and challenge historiographical conceptions of the epistemic, social, cultural and practical strength, the robustness, of scientific knowledge. Whether we look at ancient or modern, at metropolitan or peripheral knowledge, whether we consider medical or mathematical knowledge, the empirical material of all but the most superficial studies of an episode in the history of science will reveal that, in its own period, and from the perspective of those involved, the bodies of knowledge involved were often quite different in nature from what textbook epistemology tells us. Justifications of knowledge claims may have been – and often were – found to be lacking, the practical uses of the knowledge in question may have provided formidable obstacles or were entirely missing, the cultural embedding of a given body of knowledge may have been difficult, and/or the social or institutional support for it may have been less than what some actors had hoped for.
While this does not come as a surprise for any serious historian of science, the question of what this observation implies for an analysis of scientific knowledge and its historical dynamics has less often been posed. What kinds of deficiencies in knowledge were articulated, when, and by whom? What is the role that such articulations of deficiencies played in the dynamics of knowledge? Were they intended as criticisms of knowledge claims that certain actors hoped to reject, or were they admissions of weaknesses by those producing and defending new bodies
of knowledge, intended to help in improving this knowledge? Questions such as these are asked by the contributors to this volume. Taken together, their contributions show that there is a wide variety of possible answers – depending on the particular episodes studied, and on the specific interest that the authors bring to their materials.
In times of mounting criticism of scientific research on the part of political actors interested in undermining, or even denying, scientific evidence altogether, at least in certain fields such as climatology or medicine, it is important to clarify what a historical analysis of the weaknesses of knowledge advocated here does strive for, and what it does not. By discussing the wide variety of articulations of perceived weaknesses in scientific knowledge, be they epistemic, social, or practical in nature, this collection certainly does not intend to lend a hand to any form
of science denialism. Quite the opposite. We hope to contribute to a better understanding of the fluidity and even fragility of scientific endeavours in the historical situations in which they are undertaken, and of the intellectual and social processes by which they are formed. Even a knowledge fraught with, and aware of, deficiencies of many kinds, may be the best guide to reasonable and responsible action in a complicated world.
The contributions in this volume are grouped in four sets. The first three chapters discuss general perspectives on our topic. Moritz Epple begins by outlining a framework for a historical epistemology of weak knowledge. He is followed by an essay in which Anne Marcovich and Terry Shinn sketch their understanding of weaknesses, in what they have proposed to call science research regimes in earlier work. Andy Pickering, in turn, challenges our conceptions of the role – and strength or weakness – of knowledge in action, by offering new reflections on, and examples of, what he has termed dances of agency.
These reflections are followed by historical case studies. In the first group, Daryn Lehoux discusses the status of uncertain knowledge in ancient astrology, Laurence Totelin takes a look at the role of weak actors in Graeco-Roman pharmacology, and Orna Harari discusses the attempts of metaphysicians in Late Antiquity to claim the status of an exact science for their field. A comment by Annette Imhausen closes this group. The second group of case studies addresses modern bodies of knowledge that have been considered as weak. Sven Dupré discusses the ways in which “failures” were addressed in early modern artisanal knowledge. Rivka Feldhay offers an analysis of historical knowledge claims in
Dostoevesky’s novels and asks how historical knowledge, or experience, in literary writing compares to that of historians. In her chapter on narratives and theories in economics in the 1920s, Monika Wulz discusses another literary tool with a precarious relation to scientific knowledge: the role of fictions. An area of physical knowledge whose status with respect to the established hierarchy of scientific disciplines was – at least initially – perceived as weak is discussed in Falk Müller’s chapter on industrial physics in Germany. This group is closed with a joint contribution by participants of a pre-conference workshop for young scholars exploring the analysis of weak knowledge in yet other fields, including early modern literature and meteorology, recent child psychiatry, and educational sociology, while also taking up general reflections on Chinese “science” and Latourian science studies.
In the third set, Dominique Pestre, Matthias Heymann, and Richard Staley address articulations of weaknesses in bodies of knowledge relating to climate and the environment. In their contributions, we can, in particular, follow the motives of such articulations from the inner workings of climate research (as in Heymann’s discussion of computer-based climate modelling) to the political and economic attacks on it (as in Pestre’s look at environmental knowledge and regulation, or in Staley’s account of self-proclaimed “heretics” in climate science).“
The fourth and final set of contributions is devoted to medical knowledge, and thus to another field of knowledge in which claims of inherent weaknesses formed part and parcel of the field’s tradition and were re-negotiated in each historical period. Suman Seth looks at the contested role of medical knowledge in late eighteenth-century abolitionist debates. José Brunner takes us to the courtrooms of Victorian England and the medical discourse on “nervous shock” in the context of railway accidents. John Harley Warner, in turn, analyses the coemergence of a weaker, more personal form of medical knowledge with modern scientific medicine in the USA in the decades around 1900. The latter, and the specific discourses of weakness in the later rise of “evidence-based medicine”, are the subject of Cornelius Borck’s contribution. The four chapters in this set are then commented upon by Mitchell Ash.
As readers will find, several threads connect the contributions in this volume. One of these concerns the epistemology of various bodies of knowledge perceived to be weak, across the periods explored. A second is, clearly, the social and political status of such bodies of knowledge, or, in other cases, the social and political status of claims that a certain form of knowledge is weak. Finally, one recurring theme here is the practical relevance of knowledge and the role this plays in perceptions of its strength or weakness. Throughout, we find that an analysis of such perceptions of weakness, and of the discourses in which such perceptions were articulated, provides ample material for historical analysis, an analysis, we hope, that can deepen our understanding of both the significance and the fragility of knowledge in the “mangle of practice” (to borrow Andy Pickering’s term).
*
The conference upon which this collection is based was funded by Frankfurt’s Collaborative Research Centre (CRC - Sonderforschungsbereich) 1095 Discourses of Weakness and Resource Regimes, in turn funded by the German Science Foundation (DFG). We thank our CRC speaker, Iwo Amelung, and its manager, Mi Anh Duong, for generously supporting the conference. We are grateful for further financial support from Goethe University of Frankfurt/Main and the Vereinigung der Freunde und Förderer der Goethe Universität. Neither the conference nor the research performed in our group would have been possible without the work of our doctoral students, Theresa Dittmer, Nadine Eikelschulte, Lukas Jäger, and Linda Richter. They, and Martin Herrnstadt, at the time working with a Minerva fellowship at the Cohn Institute for the History
and Philosophy of Science and Ideas at Tel Aviv University, also made it possible to organise the highly successful pre-conference workshop, bringing together doctoral students and post-docs from Israel and Germany. We are extremely grateful to all organisational support given by our secretaries, Susanne Bernhart and Judith Delombre, student helpers, Leo Kaiser and Nelli Kisser, and our local magician Convin Splettsen (whose magical knowledge is definitely not weak). The manuscript of this volume has been prepared for the press by Chris Engert in Florence, whose careful language editing improved all contributions, and Nelli Kisser, whose diligent work accompanied all stages of the production process
from its early beginnings until the final layout.
We also need to thank two speakers whose important contributions to the conference could not be included in the present collection, Katharine Anderson and Eleanor Robson. Finally, one of the editors, Moritz Epple, wishes to thank Hans-Jörg Rheinberger for choosing fumaria officinalis as the subject of his first poem, opening this collection. This is a surprising coincidence, involving weak medical knowledge of a very personal relevance.
Frankfurt am Main, July 2019
Moritz Epple, Annette Imhausen, and Falk Müller

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