Sentences with phrase «sociology of science»

«It's part travelogue, part hard data, and part sociology of science, resulting in a deep and multifaceted view of the state of the world.
However to do so it must establish a close and fruitful dialogue, as it has attempted to do in the past, with the social sciences (the sociology of work, psychology of work, history of work, but also sociology of science and technology).
Jonathan D. Moreno, a professor of medical ethics and health policy and of the history and sociology of science and philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania, pointed to the social and ethical implications such technologies introduce.
Physician - scientists can also perform research in relatively nontraditional fields, such as anthropology or the history and sociology of science.
The Travels and Adventures of Serendipity A Study in Sociological Semantics and the Sociology of Science.
Indeed, quite a bit of it is eerily familiar to those who have worked in the history and sociology of science and technology over the past two decades.
Trained as a Botanist Before Moving to Research in the Sociology of Science at Brunel University
In the spirit of Lombardy's open innovation model, the Forum will feature professionals from diverse areas: responsible research and innovation; science and technology studies; public communication of science; participative and deliberative methods; public engagement; social innovation; social impact and its assessment; sociology of risk; sociology of science; technology assessment and governance; open innovation, science, and data; data ethics; and bioethics.
This area of study, which originated in the sociology of science, started out trying to measure the prestige of research studies, later branching out to analyze factors contributing to career success in the sciences, as well as popularity of cultural products such as music, art and literature.
Seems like a fascinating dive into the sociology of science, until -LSB-...]
Informed by contemporary theories of the history and sociology of science and medicine, the book considers the conflict between Cameron and Pauling, on the one hand, and their critics, Charles Moertel and the Mayo Clinic researchers, on the other, as a symptom of a broader epistemological, socioeconomic and ideological struggle.
So this is, you know, the sort of thing that the people who study the sociology of science, I think, really should be taking a close look at; because, you know, people, it's easy to see the organizational difficulties of getting 3,000 people to push in the right, or at least the same direction, the right direction might be even harder.
He offers insight into both the scientific process and the sociology of science... [an] excellent narrative.»
1:01:43 — The Travels and Adventures of Serendipity: A Study in Sociological Semantics and the Sociology of Science — Robert Merton
Hopefully, sociology of science will later study this unfortunate period of climate science, but we may conclude now that science itself has indeed corrected claims of premature knowledge.
And he's followed closely behind by Will, who says, «There is a sociology of science... and engaging the politics of this, we have to understand the enormous interests now invested in climate change.»
In his landmark 1973 work The Sociology of Science, Robert Merton established norms upon which scientists should rely.
An inflation of mediocre scientists and science, with a sociology of science, how to publish, how to advance etc, in a group think that has little to do with the creativity and dedication and method requirements of honest scientific work.
Gerard Harbison, This paper is not really a piece of «social science» so much as it is sociology of science.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z