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Science and the Social Good - Nature, Culture, and Community, 1865-1965 (Hardcover)
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Science and the Social Good - Nature, Culture, and Community, 1865-1965 (Hardcover)
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From the beginnings of industrial capitalism to contemporary
disputes over evolution, nature has long been part of the public
debate over the social good. As such, many natural scientists
throughout American history have understood their work as a
cultural activity contributing to social stability and their field
as a powerful tool for enhancing the quality of American life. In
the late Victorian era, interwar period, and post-war decades,
massive social change, economic collapse and recovery, and the
aftermath of war prompted natural scientists to offer up a
civic-minded natural science concerned with the political
well-being of American society. In Science and the Social Good,
John P. Herron explores the evolving internal and external forces
influencing the design and purpose of American natural science, by
focusing on three representative scientists-geologist Clarence
King, forester Robert Marshall, and biologist Rachel Carson-who
purposefully considered the social outcomes of their work.
As comfortable in the royal courts of Europe as the remote field
camps of the American West, Clarence King was the founding director
of the U.S. Geological Survey, and used his standing to integrate
science into late nineteenth century political debates about
foreign policy, immigration, and social reform. In the mid-1930s,
Robert Marshall founded the environmental advocacy group, The
Wilderness Society, which transformed the face of natural
preservation in America. Committed to social justice, Marshall
blended forest ecology and pragmatic philosophy to craft a natural
science ethic that extended the reach of science into political
discussions about the restructuring of society prompted by
urbanization and economic crisis. Rachel Carson deservedly gets
credit for launching the modern environmental movement with her
1962 classic Silent Spring. She made a generation of Americans
aware of the social costs inherent in the human manipulation of the
natural world and used natural science to critique established
institutions and offer an alternative vision of a healthy and
diverse society. As King, Marshall, and Carson became increasingly
wary of the social costs of industrialization, they used their
scientific work to address problems of ecological and social
imbalance. Even as science became professionalized and
compartmentalized. these scientists worked to keep science relevant
to broader intellectual debates.
John Herron offers a new take on King, Marshall, and especially
Carson and their significance that emphasizes the importance of
their work to environmental, political, and cultural affairs, while
illuminating the broader impact of natural science on American
culture.
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