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Relocating Modern Science

11/4/2019

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RELOCATING MODERN SCIENCE
By Kapil Raj
Palgrave Macmillan, 2007, 285 pages


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The subscript to the title reads: Circulation and the Construction of Knowledge in South Asia and Europe, 1650-1900. The author offers historical examples to support essentially two hypotheses. The first is that when two cultures interact, the science of both hybridize with each other, they co-construct. Each then evolves differently before and after the interaction. Traditionally western businesses look to expand into additional markets, or to gain new trading partners. In the historical period in question, each European country had some version of an East India Company that sought to exploit India and surrounding states. The belief was that the 'contact zone' such as the Indian Ocean region was a source for information. The science was happening back at the European society, then diffused or disseminated back out to the contact zone. These western countries inevitably expanded trade into some form of colonization.

This idea of science diffusing from west to east also spurred the other major argument Raj has. Western countries had an inherent mistrust of data gathered by 'locals' rather than data gathered by European scientists. He shows that even when western, essentially white, scientists are present, the real information still comes from local scholars, often in writings that already existed before the 'explorers' even arrived.

Two-Way Flow of Scientific Knowledge Between Europe and South Asia

In the reading, Kapil Raj gives examples of how Indian knowledge and expertise contributed to scientific accomplishments. These accomplishments were then brought back to Europe as a form of hybrid science. This assertion is in contrast to the tradition argument of the diffusion model where contact zones are areas where data is extracted to inform science that happens in the west, then diffused back to contact zones. Raj shows how knowledge from the west mixed with Indian knowledge to form a new sort of knowledge that was further adopted differently in both Britain and India. Each knowledge base was different from each other, and from what existed before the cultural interaction. This is because people are mutable, and they make process and knowledge likewise mutable. Science, then, is a function of situated values, norms, sociabilities, divisions of labor, regimes of proof, etc. (228) Contact zones implement co-constructive processes of negotiation.

One example, the interaction between French and Dutch botanists with locals in Orissa and Malabar which brought about two studies, the Jardin de Lorixa and the Hortus Malabaricus. French and Dutch actors learned local botanical and medical knowledge from Fakirs through pre-existing indigenous books. Both resulting works were largely ignored for various political reasons such as Antoine de Jussieu’s personal issues with Nicolas L’Empereur. Eventually additional actors looked at the information in more market-oriented terms and the value of the two works were revisited.

Mapping efforts in India by James Rennell in the 1780s, and Thomas Montgomerie throughout the 1860s to 1880s are further examples. Both used western approaches to train locals in surveying efforts, but worked with the locals (Pundits) to adopt approaches based on local needs. In the case of the Pundits working for Montgomerie, use of traditional western instruments caused negative repercussions by mountain peoples who saw the work as spying. To adjust, Montgomerie adopted Pundit bodies as instruments using pace counting in place of survey chains. In one case when Nain Singh was pushed to ride on an animal, he adjusted the stride count from his own body to that of the animal. When western cartographers questioned the process it was later shown this approach to be more accurate than some other western attempts using scientific instruments alone (215-216). This approach also often kept the human 'instrument' from being killed.

Mapping efforts started with economic goals in mind (defining farm lands or trade routes). Eventually these goals gave way to political goals, such as when the British government took advantage of French and Russian wars, coupled with fear of a potential Russia-China pact, to militarily secure Himalayan trade routes. Despite the success of the mapping effort, the exploitation attempt went poorly in 1904 when British forces killed 5000 Tibetans, then left without any real gain. In this sort of example Raj calls cartography ‘politics by other means.’ (185)

Credible Witnesses

Given skepticism by British scholars who never left the comfort of the Royal Geographic Society, Raj points to efforts by East India Company (EIC) officials to inspire trust in efforts at knowledge generation by a blend of British and Indian scholars. One way they did this was to create colleges in India where EIC officials were sent to learn local information such as language and geography. Locals were simultaneously taught western science, sometimes separate from their British counterparts, sometimes in the same classes. The more the EIC western students learned from and interacted with locals, the more they came to trust them and convey back to England the trustworthiness of generated information. In fact it worked so well there came a time when Indian scholars were brought to England to teach similar topics in British schools.

Indian scholars were able to share their own theoretical/mathematical ideas which seem to work better than the experimental learning encouraged by instruments shared from the west. (179) Western math books were quickly consumed by Indian scholars, and then updated with additional new Indian mathematical discoveries.


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The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, 3rd Edition

8/11/2019

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​THE HANDBOOK OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES            
Edited by Edward J. Hackett, Olga Amsterdamska, 
​​Michael Lynch, and Judy Wajcman
The MIT Press, 2008, 1065 pages
 
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Every so many years (somewhat random as best as I can tell) leading practitioners of the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS), also known as Science, Technology and Society, put together a compendium of academic papers that represent major trends in the discipline at the time of publication. The version covered by this review is the third edition.
 
The major sections include thoughts about the academic discipline as a field of study, social and science practice, politics, institutions, economics, and emergent technosciences. I started reading the volume before starting my post-graduate work at Virginia Tech. Because of the size (page count) and variation of thought it takes time to wade through the papers contained. The last third or so I had to balance with my school reading that took way more of my time.
 
The topics are varied enough that those not specifically seeking STS insight will still likely find something so long as the reader has some interest in non-fiction. Some of the writings are more academic and jargon-filled. Others use more plane language. Like most academic papers, none are too difficult to follow, but having some context in the field helps some.

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How We Decide

7/17/2018

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​HOW WE DECIDE
By Jonah Lehrer
First Mariner Books, 2010, 302 pages
Reviewed by Michael Beach
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The author shares a number of stories to demonstrate decisions people make. He goes on to speak to the neurological reasons behind the decisions in the stories. Stories include split-decisions by airplane pilots, sports figures, military members, etc. The neurological portion speaks to the role of different brain centers, dopamine levels and the like.
 
The examples and logic seem sound enough. As with any work on human thought process, there is an overlying question as to whether brain activity causes the decision outcome, or if the person’s thought process results in the displayed brain activity. Another way to think about this dilemma is whether we act as a result of our biology, or the controller of our biology; nature or nurture.
 
A look at Wikipedia reveals the following:
 
On March 1, 2013, following revelations that Lehrer has been caught in numerous falsifications in his œuvre of writings, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announced the book was taken "off sale" after an internal review.
 
First Mariner Books is a brand of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. There is no indication as to whether this particular work is in question. Of course this sort of shadow makes all the ideas immediately suspect. Despite that, if the reader takes the information with a grain of salt (as we should on any work) there are some nuggets of ideas worth considering. Skepticism on anything claiming to be factual is a good idea, but at the same time we should be open to differing perspectives.
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AWARE - Our World, Our Water

3/24/2018

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​AWARE - OUR WORLD, OUR WATER
By a large number of contributors
Project AWARE Foundation, 2009, 115 pages
​Reviewed by Michael Beach

This work is used as a manual for two PADI certification courses I took last year. PADI is the Professional Association of Dive Instructors. I've been a professional member of PADI since 1987 when I completed my Divemaster certification. One certification this book is used for is called Project AWARE Specialist. The other is AWARE Coral Reef Conservation. 

The book walks begins with a more academic look at fresh and salt water systems in general. Then it moves to coral reef systems specifically. After that there is an explanation of all the ways the world aquatic resources are being damaged and the effects. Finally there is a review of what the diving community has been doing, and what individual divers can do to help make things better.

Regardless where a person stands on topics such as global climate change, or how humans and nature should interact, there is some good food for thought in this manual. I'm certainly not some radical environmentalist, but I have been taught my whole live to be conservation minded. From my earliest days I have been out in nature and have enjoyed wild places. I do agree with the sentiment of "think global, and act local." Diving in particular has brought me in contact with some amazing life as recent as just two months ago. On that occasion I was able to make two dives just off of the island of St. Thomas in the USVI. To me, if a person wants to see how masterful an artist God is, they need only to enter those sorts of environment and experience it directly, personally.

Here is a related thought from the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). It's called the outdoor code.

As an American, I will do my best to –
Be clean in my outdoor manners.
Be careful with fire.
Be considerate in the outdoors.
Be conservation minded.

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