Minority Report: Dissent and Diversity in Science

Minority Report: Dissent and Diversity in Science

by William T. Lynch Associate Professor
Minority Report: Dissent and Diversity in Science

Minority Report: Dissent and Diversity in Science

by William T. Lynch Associate Professor

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Overview

In Philip K. Dick’s The Minority Report, ‘precogs’, who are imaginary individuals capable of seeing the future are relied upon to stop crime, with a consensus report synthesized from two of three precogs. When the protaganist is indicted for a future murder, he suspects a conspiracy and seeks out the “minority report,” detailing the suppressed testimony of the third precog. Science works a lot like this science fiction story. Contrary to the view that scientists in a field all share the same “paradigm,” as Thomas Kuhn famously argued, scientists support different, and competing, research programs. Statements of scientific consensus need to be actively synthesized from the work of different scientists. Not all scientific work will be equally credited by science as a whole. While this system works well enough for most purposes, it is possible for minority views to fail to get the hearing that they deserve.

This book analyzes the support that should be given to minority views, reconsidering classic debates in science and technology studies and examining numerous case studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781786612380
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 10/16/2020
Series: Collective Studies in Knowledge and Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 380
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

William T. Lynch is Associate Professor in the Department of History at Wayne State University.

Table of Contents

1. Minority Report: Research Programmes and the Debate about Climate Change

2. Generating Challenges to Dominant Ideas: Lakatos and Feyerabend’s Dialectical Alternative

3. Making Anomalies Work: Dialectical Engagement versus Anomaly-Mongering in Evolutionary Biology

4. Members Only: Wittgensteinian Sociology and the Debate about Carbohydrates and Fat

5. The Place of Science and the Turn to Material Practice: A Lab of One’s Own for Patient Activists

6. Counterfactuals and Second-Guessing Scientists and Engineers: Green Chemistry, the Precautionary Principle, and Social Movements in the History of Science

7. Commodification and the Erosion of the Scientific Ethos

Bibliography

Index
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