"Narrative Experiments " was first published in 1989. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions.
In "Narrative Experiments," Gayle Ormiston and Ralph Sassower
bring a refreshing perspective to the domains of inquiry we call
"science" and "technology," asserting that traditional definitions
(like classical idealism and materialism) fail to suggest the rich
and complex cultural/linguistic interplay occurring between them.
This context is not merely a background, nor is Ormiston and
Sassower's just one more interdisciplinary approach to the subject.
Instead, their book argues, science, technology, and the humanities
developed in concert with one another, and their reciprocity
obliterates all traditional disciplinary boundaries.
Ormiston and Sassower build their case by devoting a chapter to
each of the four themes emerging from the etymological
introduction. First, they look at the role fiction and other
literary modes play in developing our attitudes toward science and
technology -- how the visions of Bacon, Hobbes, Galileo, Rousseau,
Mary Shelley, and Orwell evoke both anxiety and hope. Next, they
examine a series of eighteenth-century "fictions" -- the
Enlightenment texts of Kant, Rousseau, and Hume -- and the elevated
(but ambiguous) status science and technology associated with them.
The last two chapters evaluate modes of discursive authority and
its dissemination -- classical and modern extralinguistic
approaches; the contemporary-linguistic view espoused by Rorty,
Quine, and others; and their own avowedly experimental journey
through the labyrinths of cultural and linguistic usage.
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