Csiszar Alex
*Department of the History of Science,Harvard University,Science Center 371,Cambridge,MA 02138,USA. Email:
Br J Hist Sci. 2017 Mar;50(1):23-60. doi: 10.1017/S0007087417000012. Epub 2017 Feb 16.
The Catalogue of Scientific Papers, published by the Royal Society of London beginning in 1867, projected back to the beginning of the nineteenth century a novel vision of the history of science in which knowledge was built up out of discrete papers each connected to an author. Its construction was an act of canon formation that helped naturalize the idea that scientific publishing consisted of special kinds of texts and authors that were set apart from the wider landscape of publishing. By recovering the decisions and struggles through which the Catalogue was assembled, this essay aims to contribute to current efforts to denaturalize the scientific paper as the dominant genre of scientific life. By privileging a specific representation of the course of a scientific life as a list of papers, the Catalogue helped shape underlying assumptions about the most valuable fruits of a scientific career. Its enumerated lists of authors' periodical publications were quickly put to use as a means of measuring scientific productivity and reputation, as well as by writers of biography and history. Although it was first conceived as a search technology, this essay locates the Catalogue's most consequential legacy in its uses as a technology of valuation.
伦敦皇家学会自1867年起出版的《科学论文目录》,将19世纪初的科学史呈现出一种全新的视角,即知识是由与作者相关的离散论文积累而成。它的编纂是一种形成经典的行为,有助于使科学出版由特殊类型的文本和作者组成这一观念自然化,这些文本和作者与更广泛的出版领域相区分。通过追溯《目录》编纂过程中的决策和斗争,本文旨在为当前使科学论文不再被视为科学活动主导体裁的努力做出贡献。通过将科学活动过程的特定呈现方式优先设定为论文列表,《目录》帮助塑造了关于科学职业生涯最有价值成果的潜在假设。其列举的作者期刊出版物列表很快被用作衡量科学生产力和声誉的手段,传记作者和历史学家也加以利用。尽管它最初被构想为一种检索技术,但本文认为《目录》最具影响力的遗产在于其作为一种评估技术的用途。