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This book is the first to trace the origins and significance of
positivism on a global scale. Taking their cues from Auguste Comte
and John Stuart Mill, positivists pioneered a universal,
experience-based culture of scientific inquiry for studying nature
and society-a new science that would enlighten all of humankind.
Positivists envisaged one world united by science, but their
efforts spawned many. Uncovering these worlds of positivism, the
volume ranges from India, the Ottoman Empire, and the Iberian
Peninsula to Central Europe, Russia, and Brazil, examining
positivism's impact as one of the most far-reaching intellectual
movements of the modern world. Positivists reinvented science,
claiming it to be distinct from and superior to the humanities.
They predicated political governance on their refashioned science
of society, and as political activists, they sought and often
failed to reconcile their universalism with the values of
multiculturalism. Providing a genealogy of scientific governance
that is sorely needed in an age of post-truth politics, this volume
breaks new ground in the fields of intellectual and global history,
the history of science, and philosophy.
Language is the most essential medium of scientific activity. Many
historians, sociologists and science studies scholars have
investigated scientific language for this reason, but only few have
examined those cases where language itself has become an object of
scientific discussion. Over the centuries scientists have sought to
control, refine and engineer language for various epistemological,
communicative and nationalistic purposes. This book seeks to
explore cases in the history of science in which questions or
concerns with language have bubbled to the surface in scientific
discourse. This opens a window into the particular ways in which
scientists have conceived of and construed language as the central
medium of their activity across different cultural contexts and
places, and the clashes and tensions that have manifested their
many attempts to engineer it to both preserve and enrich its
function. The subject of language draws out many topics that have
mostly been neglected in the history of science, such as the
connection between the emergence of national languages and the
development of science within national settings, and allows us to
connect together historical episodes from many understudied
cultural and linguistic venues such as Eastern European and
medieval Hebrew science.
This book is the first to trace the origins and significance of
positivism on a global scale. Taking their cues from Auguste Comte
and John Stuart Mill, positivists pioneered a universal,
experience-based culture of scientific inquiry for studying nature
and society-a new science that would enlighten all of humankind.
Positivists envisaged one world united by science, but their
efforts spawned many. Uncovering these worlds of positivism, the
volume ranges from India, the Ottoman Empire, and the Iberian
Peninsula to Central Europe, Russia, and Brazil, examining
positivism's impact as one of the most far-reaching intellectual
movements of the modern world. Positivists reinvented science,
claiming it to be distinct from and superior to the humanities.
They predicated political governance on their refashioned science
of society, and as political activists, they sought and often
failed to reconcile their universalism with the values of
multiculturalism. Providing a genealogy of scientific governance
that is sorely needed in an age of post-truth politics, this volume
breaks new ground in the fields of intellectual and global history,
the history of science, and philosophy.
Language is the most essential medium of scientific activity. Many
historians, sociologists and science studies scholars have
investigated scientific language for this reason, but only few have
examined those cases where language itself has become an object of
scientific discussion. Over the centuries scientists have sought to
control, refine and engineer language for various epistemological,
communicative and nationalistic purposes. This book seeks to
explore cases in the history of science in which questions or
concerns with language have bubbled to the surface in scientific
discourse. This opens a window into the particular ways in which
scientists have conceived of and construed language as the central
medium of their activity across different cultural contexts and
places, and the clashes and tensions that have manifested their
many attempts to engineer it to both preserve and enrich its
function. The subject of language draws out many topics that have
mostly been neglected in the history of science, such as the
connection between the emergence of national languages and the
development of science within national settings, and allows us to
connect together historical episodes from many understudied
cultural and linguistic venues such as Eastern European and
medieval Hebrew science.
Combining history of science and a history ofuniversities with the
new imperial history, Universitiesin Imperial Austria 1848-1918: A
Social History of a Multilingual Space by Jan Surman analyzes the
practice of scholarly migration and its lastinginfluence on the
intellectual output in the Austrian part of the HabsburgEmpire. The
Habsburg Empire and its successor stateswere home to developments
that shaped Central Europe's scholarship well into the twentieth
century. Universities became centers of both state- and
nation-building,as well as of confessional resistance, placing
scholars if not in conflict,then certainly at odds with the neutral
international orientation of academe. By going beyond national
narratives, Surman reveals the Empire as a state with institutions
divided by language but united by legislation, practices, and other
influences. Such an approach allows readers a better view to how
scholars turned gradually away from state-centric discourse to form
distinct language communities after 1867; these influences affected
scholarship, and by examining the scholarly record, Surman tracks
the turn. Drawing on archives in Austria, the Czech Republic,
Poland, and Ukraine, Surman analyzes the careers of several
thousandscholars from the faculties of philosophy and medicine of a
number of Habsburguniversities, thus covering various moments in
the history of the Empire forthe widest view. Universities in
Imperial Austria 1848-1918 focuses on the tension between the
political and linguistic spaces scholars occupied and shows that
this tension did not lead to a gradual dissolution of the
monarchy's academia, but rather to an ongoing development of new
strategies to cope with the cultural and linguistic multitude.
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