Acknowledgements Introduction Opening Pandora's Black Box PART I FROM WEARER TO STRONGER RHETORIC Chapter I Literature Part A: Controversies Part B: When controversies flare up the literature becomes technical Part C: Writing texts that withstand the assaults of a hostile environment Conclusion: Numbers, more numbers Chapter 2 Laboratories Part A: From texts to things: A showdown Part B: Building up counter-laboratories Part C: Appealing (to) nature PART II FROM WEAR POINTS TO STRONGHOLDS Chapter 3 Machines Introduction: The quandary of the fact-builder Part A: Translating interests Part B: Keeping the interested groups in line Part C: The model of diffusion versus the model of translation Chapter 4 Insiders Out Part A: Interesting others in the laboratories Part B: Counting allies and resources PART III FROM SHORT TO LONGER NETWORKS Chapter 5 Tribunals of Reason Part A: The trials of rationality Part B: Sociologics Part C: Who needs hard facts? Chapter 6 Centres of calculation Prologue: The domestication of the savage mind Part A: Action at a distance Part B: Centres of calculation Part C: Metrologies Appendix 1
Bruno Latour was Professor Emeritus at Sciences Po Paris. He was the 2021 Kyoto Prize Laureate in Arts and Philosophy and was awarded the 2013 Holberg International Memorial Prize.
One cannot but be impressed by the scope of Latour’s work… This is
no mere bricolage, but a coherent and powerful framework for
research. I predict that Science in Action will have an impact
comparable to Thomas Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions
both as a provocation to philosophers and as an inspiration to
sociologists and historians of science.
*Times Literary Supplement*
This account of science as composed of drifting, recombining
networks is presented with considerable charm and humour. There are
many brief case histories to enliven the text, and the book works
very well as a guide through scientific reasoning.
*Nature*
Latour’s Science in Action is a ‘must read’ for all sociologists,
not just because the sociology of science is a dynamic and growing
subdiscipline, but more importantly because Latour’s thesis
challenges the notions that underlie sociologists’ efforts to
distinguish our field as a ‘science’… Latour’s thesis is that
science, including sociology, is collective action and that
facticity is a consequence, not a cause, of collective action… An
excellent and enjoyable introduction to the sociology of
science.
*Contemporary Sociology*
There is a wealth of material and some titillating insight into
discoveries beginning with the framed race to find the structure of
DNA—the double helix—and in Latour’s hands, it becomes a true
cliffhanger… This [book] will reward those who want to probe
science and the modern world in depth.
*Kirkus Reviews*
This book argues that science is a social activity… The message is
important… The book is convincing and informative.
*Science Books & Films*
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