History Department/STS Program, Maastricht University, Netherlands.
Hist Sci. 2021 Dec;59(4):434-460. doi: 10.1177/0073275320977750. Epub 2021 Jan 14.
Historians are showing increasing interest in scientific internationalism, the notion that science transcends national differences and hence advances peace and cooperation. This notion became particularly popular in the decades around 1900, the heyday of the universal expositions and the so-called first era of globalization. In this article I argue that in order to properly historicize scientific internationalism, it is imperative to understand how actors science to have pacifist effects, and to relate their technoscientific to their geopolitical imaginaries. To illustrate this, I analyze the 1911 novel (translated as ) by the famous Austrian pacifist Baroness Bertha von Suttner. It tells the story of a scientific conference whose participants, by the sheer brilliance of their thought, ward off war and preserve world peace. Relating the novel to von Suttner's own life experiences, I situate her internationalism in the social texture and international relations of the late Habsburg Empire. It appears that Von Suttner mobilized notions of the pacific effects of science with an eye to preserving both the European system of states and the position of the aristocracy.
历史学家越来越关注科学国际主义,即科学超越国家差异,从而促进和平与合作的观念。这种观念在 1900 年前后的几十年里特别流行,当时正值万国博览会和所谓的全球化第一时代的鼎盛时期。在本文中,我认为为了正确地将科学国际主义历史化,必须理解行为者如何将科学赋予和平主义效果,并将他们的技术科学与地缘政治想象联系起来。为了说明这一点,我分析了著名的奥地利和平主义男爵夫人伯莎·冯·苏特纳于 1911 年创作的小说《放下武器》。它讲述了一个科学会议的故事,与会者仅凭他们思想的卓越,避免了战争,维护了世界和平。我将小说与冯·苏特纳自己的生活经历联系起来,将她的国际主义置于哈布斯堡帝国晚期的社会结构和国际关系中。似乎冯·苏特纳动员了科学的和平主义效果的概念,旨在维护欧洲国家体系和贵族地位。