영문목차
Series editor's foreword=ix
Introduction=1
Part one: The political and material conditions of scientific inquiry=5
1. Science as the open society and its ideological deformations=7
Introduction: the artifIce of science as the open society=7
Republicanism as the political philosophy of an open science=11
The elusive material basis of republicanism=15
The slippery slope from republicanism to liberalism=19
Research ethics as the liberal ideology of scientifIc governance=22
The cardinal republican strategy: shoring up the commons by taxing social inheritance=25
2. The role of scale in the scope of scientific governance=28
The ideal of the experimenting society=28
Hegel's revenge on the ideal=31
What would it mean for science to have outgrown knowledge as its aim?=34
The ungovernability of Big Democracy and Big Science: of Rousseau and Feyerabend=38
Inadequate philosophical solutions to the problems of Big Science=42
An inadequate educational solution: science literacy=45
Part two: The university as a site for the governance of science=47
3. The historical interdependence of the university and knowledge production=49
The elusive social value of the university: can't live with it, can't live without it=49
In what sense might the university's grip on knowledge production be slipping?=51
Academia through the ages: from cloistered philosophers to besieged administrators=54
The Reformation and the Enlightenment as the original anti-university movements=58
4. Multiculturalism's challenge to academic integrity-or a tale of two churches=62
The modern salvaging of the university: the pre-history of multiculturalism=62
Multiculturalism's shattering of the university's Enlightenment legacy=65
What women's ways of knowing have to do with women-and other embarrassing issues for multiculturalists=69
5. The university as capitalism's final frontier - or the fading hope for Enlightenment in a complex world=75
The university's search for a republican identity: Enlightenment lost=75
Complexity as post-Enlightenment academic ideology=78
Science without vocation in the 'knowledge society'=81
'I am cited, therefore 1 am': the politics of recognition in the modern academy=85
Science's 'economy of scale' as the ideology of self-sacrifice=89
Evolutionism as the mask of decline in a complex world=92
Part three: The secularization of science and a new deal for science policy=97
6. Sociology as both sanctifier and secularizer of science=99
Science: from subject to object of secularization=99
Remapping science's sacred space in contemporary America=102
Secularizing the legitimatory function of the history of science=108
Secularizaton as university policy: towards a new asceticism?=112
7. The road not taken: revisiting the original New Deal=117
The original rise and fall of New Deal science policy=117
Time for a renewed New Deal? The deskilling and casualization of academic labour=122
Economic competitiveness as the continuation of Cold War science policy by other means=127
8. Elements for a new constitution of science=131
Introduction: the two models of constitutionalism=131
Representing science: from trickle-down effects to workplace politics=132
Three strategies for democratizing science=135
A sample proposal for constituting science as a democratic polity=146
Conclusion: is there an unlimited right to be wrong?=151
References=156
Index=165