Pandora Katherine, Rader Karen A
Department of the History of Science, Physical Sciences Building 619, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019, USA.
Isis. 2008 Jun;99(2):350-64. doi: 10.1086/588693.
The history of science is more than the history of scientists. This essay argues that various modem "publics" should be counted as belonging within an enlarged vision of who constitutes the "scientific community"--and describes how the history of science could be important for understanding their experiences. It gives three examples of how natural knowledge-making happens in vernacular contexts: Victorian Britain's publishing experiments in "popular science" as effective literary strategies for communicating to lay and specialist readers; twentieth-century American science museums as important and contested sites for conveying both scientific ideas and ideas about scientific practice; and contemporary mass-mediated images of the "ideal" scientist as providing counternarratives to received professional scientific norms. Finally, it suggests how humanistic knowledge might help both scientists and historians grapple more effectively with contemporary challenges presented by science in public spheres. By studying the making and elaboration of scientific knowledge within popular culture, historians of science can provide substantively grounded insights into the relations between the public and professionals.
科学史不仅仅是科学家的历史。本文认为,各种现代“公众”应被视为构成“科学界”这一扩大视野的一部分——并描述了科学史如何对理解他们的经历具有重要意义。它给出了三个自然知识在本土语境中形成的例子:维多利亚时代英国在“大众科学”方面的出版实验,这是向普通读者和专业读者进行有效传播的文学策略;20世纪美国的科学博物馆,作为传达科学思想和科学实践理念的重要且存在争议的场所;以及当代大众媒体塑造的“理想”科学家形象,它为公认的专业科学规范提供了反叙事。最后,它提出人文知识如何可能帮助科学家和历史学家更有效地应对科学在公共领域带来的当代挑战。通过研究大众文化中科学知识的形成与阐释,科学史家能够为公众与专业人士之间的关系提供有实质依据的见解。