"Davis Baird's "Thing Knowledge uses instruments to do philosophy.
Grappling with a wonderful assortment of objects--from antique
orreries to modern spectrographs--he draws the reader deep into
fascinating questions about the nature of knowledge. All too often,
the knowledge Baird pursues here has been obscured by accounts that
reduce understanding to theory. By contrast, in this rich text
Baird shows the myriad of ways that models and devices do work in
science: by representing, by manipulating, by measuring, and by
calculating. This is a book as lucid on the semantic account of
theories as it is on the inner workings of the cyclotron; it is a
book that brings the laboratory to philosophers and philosophy into
the laboratory."--Peter Galison, author of "Einstein's Clocks,
Poincare's Maps: Empires of Time
"Davis Baird has given us something new and demanding to think
about: namely, in addition to propositional knowledge, he argues,
there is 'thing knowledge.' That is, scientific instruments embody
or encapsulate knowledge in ways that most often not transparent.
In making his case, Baird forces us to reconceptualize how we go
about doing science and how to understand the product of human
labor, both intellectual and manual. "Thing Knowledge is must
reading for anyone interested in the development of science and its
attendant technologies."--Joseph C. Pitt, author of "Thinking About
Technology: Foundations of the Philosophy of Technology
"Over the years the new frontier in philosophy of science has
been on logic, then on theories to most recently on models and
experimentation. Davis Baird goes one step further and considers
the 'immediate' kind of knowledge embodied by scientificinstruments
and devices. His book is highly thought provoking and will become a
classic source."--Eric Scerri, UCLA, Department of Chemistry and
Biochemistry, and editor of Foundations of Chemistry.
"From the air pump to the dynamo to the cyclotron, machines have
played key roles in the development of scientific knowledge. Here,
for the first time, Davis Baird looks at those machines as actual
forms of scientific knowledge. Baird moves adeptly from historical
case study to philosophical explanation in this convincing study of
the material culture of science."--Ann Johnson, Department of
History, Fordham University
General
Imprint: |
University of California Press
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
February 2004 |
First published: |
2005 |
Authors: |
Davis Baird
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 25mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover - Cloth over boards
|
Pages: |
296 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-520-23249-5 |
Categories: |
Books >
Science & Mathematics >
Science: general issues >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-520-23249-6 |
Barcode: |
9780520232495 |
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