Increasingly, critics accused practitioners of hiding hubris behind
their purported humanity and questioned whether an increasingly
professional scientific community could retain its grip on the
meaning of compassion. This volume presents a set of responses to
this criticism and others, showing the extent to which the
lived-experience of scientific practice became a justification in
and of itself for the expression of social, political and cultural
authority. Bare knowledge, as it was presented, came with an
enormous social valuation. These sources show how that authority
changed and grew over time.
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