Dierig Sven
Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftgeschichte, Wilhelmstrass, Berlin.
Osiris. 2003;18:116-34. doi: 10.1086/649380.
This article brings together what until now have been separate fields of nineteenth-century history: the development of experimental physiology, the growth of mechanized industry, and the city, where their threads intertwined. The main argument is that the laboratory in the city employed the same technological and organizational approaches to modernize that the city used to industrialize. To bring the adoption of technology into focus, the article discusses laboratory research as it developed after the introduction of small-scale power engines. With its machines, the industrialized city provided not only the key metaphor of the nineteenth-century life sciences but also a key technology that shifted experimental practices in animal research from a kind of preindustrial craft to a more mechanized production of knowledge. With its "factory-laboratories," the late-nineteenth-century city became the birthplace for the first living, data-producing hybird---part animal and part machine.
本文将直到现在仍各自独立的19世纪历史领域汇聚在一起:实验生理学的发展、机械化工业的增长以及城市,这些领域的线索在城市中相互交织。主要论点是,城市中的实验室采用了与城市工业化相同的技术和组织方法来实现现代化。为了聚焦技术的采用,本文讨论了在小规模动力引擎引入后发展起来的实验室研究。工业化城市凭借其机器,不仅为19世纪生命科学提供了关键隐喻,还提供了一项关键技术,该技术将动物研究中的实验实践从一种前工业化工艺转变为更机械化的知识生产方式。19世纪后期的城市凭借其“工厂实验室”,成为了首个有生命、能产生数据的混合体——部分是动物,部分是机器的诞生地。