Objectivity has a history, and it is full of surprises. In
Objectivity, Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison chart the emergence
of objectivity in the mid-nineteenth-century sciences--and show how
the concept differs from its alternatives, truth-to-nature and
trained judgment. This is a story of lofty epistemic ideals fused
with workaday practices in the making of scientific images. From
the eighteenth through the early twenty-first centuries, the images
that reveal the deepest commitments of the empirical sciences--from
anatomy to crystallography--are those featured in scientific
atlases, the compendia that teach practitioners what is worth
looking at and how to look at it. Galison and Daston use atlas
images to uncover a hidden history of scientific objectivity and
its rivals. Whether an atlas maker idealizes an image to capture
the essentials in the name of truth-to-nature or refuses to erase
even the most incidental detail in the name of objectivity or
highlights patterns in the name of trained judgment is a decision
enforced by an ethos as well as by an epistemology. As Daston and
Galison argue, atlases shape the subjects as well as the objects of
science. To pursue objectivity--or truth-to-nature or trained
judgment--is simultaneously to cultivate a distinctive scientific
self wherein knowing and knower converge. Moreover, the very point
at which they visibly converge is in the very act of seeing not as
a separate individual but as a member of a particular scientific
community. Embedded in the atlas image, therefore, are the traces
of consequential choices about knowledge, persona, and collective
sight. Objectivity is a book addressed to anyone interested in the
elusive and crucial notion of objectivity-- and in what it means to
peer into the world scientifically. Lorraine Daston is Director at
the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin,
Germany. She is the coauthor of Wonders and the Order of Nature,
1150-1750 and the editor of Things That Talk: Object Lessons from
Art and Science (both Zone Books). Peter Galison is Pellegrino
University Professor of the History of Science and of Physics at
Harvard University. He is the author of Einstein's Clocks,
Poincare's Maps: Empires of Time, How Experiments End, and Image
and Logic: A Material Culture of Microphysics, and other books, and
coeditor (with Emily Thompson) of The Architecture of Science (MIT
Press, 1999)."
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