Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Writing Science-serien

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  • - The Third Dimension of Science
     
    396,-

    This book is about wooden ships and plastic molecules, wax bodies and a perspex economy, monuments in cork and mathematics in plaster, casts of diseases, habitat dioramas and extinct monsters rebuilt in bricks and mortar. Considering such objects together for the first time, this interdisciplinary volume demonstrates how, in research as well as teaching, 3-D models played major roles in making knowledge.

  • - Literature as an Epoch of the Postal System
    av Bernhard Siegert
    370,-

    This book examines how one aspect of the social and technological situation of literature-namely, the postal system as a mode of transmission-determined how literature was produced and what was produced within literature.

  • av Friedrich A. Kittler
    418 - 1 517,-

    Part technological history of the emergent new media in the late 19th century, part theoretical discussion of the responses to these media-including texts by Rilke, Kafka, and Heidegger, as well as elaborations by Edison, Bell, Turing, and other innovators-this book analyzes this momentous shift using insights from Foucault, Lacan, and McLuhan.

  • - Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing
    av Thierry Bardini
    370 - 1 468,-

    This tells the story of Douglas Engelbart's revolutionary vision, reaching beyond conventional histories of Silicon Valley to probe the ideology that shaped some of the basic ingredients of contemporary life.

  • - Victorian Solar Eclipse Expeditions
    av Alex Soojung-Kim Pang
    318 - 1 552,-

    Astronomy was a popular part of Victorian science, and British atronomers travelled to remote areas to watch the sun eclipsed by the moon. This book shows how the organization of science, advances in photography, and new printing technology remade the character of scientific observation.

  • - Boundaries, Contexts, and Power
     
    462,-

    Here, sixteen prominent scientists examine whether the sciences are, or ever were, unified by a single theoretical view of nature or a methodological foundation.

  • - Issues in Contemporary Phenomenology and Cognitive Science
     
    2 158,-

    This work aims to shed new light on the relations between Husserlian phenomenology and the present-day efforts toward a scientific theory of cognition with its complex structure of disciplines, levels of explanation, and conflicting hypotheses.

  • - Argentine Culture's Modern Dreams
    av Beatriz Sarlo
    906,-

    The Technical Imagination explores how technology entered the popular imagination in the Argentina of the 1920s and 1930s and how its products helped to shape modern thinking at all levels of Argentine society.

  • - Issues in Contemporary Phenomenology and Cognitive Science
     
    509,-

    This work aims to shed new light on the relations between Husserlian phenomenology and the present-day efforts toward a scientific theory of cognition with its complex structure of disciplines, levels of explanation, and conflicting hypotheses.

  • - Scientific Texts and the Materiality of Communication
     
    462,-

    Metaphors of inscription and writing figure prominently in all levels of discourse in and about science. This volume of 16 essays examines the subject by juxtaposing work from historically focused science and literature studies with work inspired by poststructuralist philosophy and semiotics.

  • - Expert Advice as Public Drama
    av Stephen Hilgartner
    292 - 1 189,-

    Behind today's headlines stands an unobtrusive army of science advisors-panels of scientific, medical, and engineering experts evaluate the safety of the food we eat, the drugs we take, and the cars we drive. This book studies, theoretically and empirically, the social process through which the credibility of expert advice is produced, challenged, and sustained.

  • - Individualism, Science, Visuality
    av Karen Newman
    266 - 1 293,-

    This book uses 103 illustrations from the 16th century onward and the history of obstetrical and embryological knowledge to argue that modes of visualizing science have profoundly determined "fetal politics" and the contemporary abortion debates.

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