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The extensive interaction between science/technology and the
military has become increasingly apparent in the years since the
Second World War. New institutional arrangements, new fields of
study and research, new patterns of funding and support, new
relations with industry, the academy and the state, and new
professional roles have marked the sciences and technology; the
military transformations have been equally important: new weapons
systems of great complexity, new strategies and practices, new
reliance on high technologies and advanced sciences, and extensive
involvement in the funding of science and technology in the
'civilian' sector. While the literature in the social studies of
science and technology has from time to time addressed these issues
(especially from the historical perspective), the attention paid to
the very extensive interactions and concommitant transformations
has not been commensurate with the magnitude of the enterprise or
changes undergone. These volumes contribute both reports of new
research and stimulating additional study.Volume 12/1 contains Part
I: War and the restructuring of physics, and Part II: The military
and technological development.Volume 12/2 contains Part III:
Transformation of industry and medicine, Part IV: Nuclear weapons
and nuclear power, and Part V: R&D: military, industry and the
academy.
The extensive interaction between science/technology and the
military has become increasingly apparent in the years since the
Second World War. New institutional arrangements, new fields of
study and research, new patterns of funding and support, new
relations with industry, the academy and the state, and new
professional roles have marked the sciences and technology; the
military transformations have been equally important: new weapons
systems of great complexity, new strategies and practices, new
reliance on high technologies and advanced sciences, and extensive
involvement in the funding of science and technology in the
'civilian' sector. While the literature in the social studies of
science and technology has from time to time addressed these issues
(especially from the historical perspective), the attention paid to
the very extensive interactions and concommitant transformations
has not been commensurate with the magnitude of the enterprise or
changes undergone. These volumes contribute both reports of new
research and stimulating additional study.Volume 12/1 contains Part
I: War and the restructuring of physics, and Part II: The military
and technological development.Volume 12/2 contains Part III:
Transformation of industry and medicine, Part IV: Nuclear weapons
and nuclear power, and Part V: R&D: military, industry and the
academy.
Transformation and Tradition in the Sciences presents a sampling of
work in the history of science by colleagues and former students
and associates of I. Bernard Cohen, one of the most influential
figures in the rise of the history of science as a scholarly
discipline. The volume is divided into four parts: the history and
philosophy of the exact sciences and mathematics; the
eighteenth-century tradition; science in America; and scientific
ideas in their cultural context. These major themes, each of which
has been a subject of study by Professor Cohen, will interest a
range of historians interested in the development of science and
the history of ideas.
This collection of essays from international scholars from various
disciplines addresses the theme of technological pessimism; the
conviction that technology has given us the means not only to
achieve unlimited progress, but to destroy ourselves and our most
cherished values.
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