Description

Book Synopsis

Sandra Harding here develops further the themes first addressed in her widely influential book, The Science Question in Feminism, and conducts a compelling analysis of feminist theories on the philosophical problem of how we know what we...



Trade Review

Whose Science, Whose Knowledge? represents a transition from gender to power considerations in Harding's continuous efforts to raise questions about the theory and practice of science.

-- Shulamit Reinharz * Gender & Society *

Harding's account offers a good insight into a variety of feminist responses to the hegemony apparently exercised by scientific thinking. Some readers will take the book as a challenge to the sociology of science to examine its arguments and assumptions in the light of standpoint theory and feminist postmodernism.

-- Steven Yearley * British Journal of Sociology *

This is an important book that has much to offer practicing scientists but probably will not be read by many of them. That is a shame, because its bold claims are usefully unsettling and its argument begs for engagement. One of the basic messages of Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?—that all fields of natural science are best analyzed from within the social sciences, of which they are logically a part, rather than taken as external models for the social sciences—has potential consequences for most, perhaps all, scientific practice.

-- Rayna Rapp, New School for Social Research * Science *

Whose Science Whose Knowledge

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    RRP £25.99 – you save £1.30 (5%)

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    A Paperback / softback by Sandra Harding

    5 in stock

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      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 07/05/1991
      ISBN13: 9780801497469, 978-0801497469
      ISBN10: 0801497469

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Sandra Harding here develops further the themes first addressed in her widely influential book, The Science Question in Feminism, and conducts a compelling analysis of feminist theories on the philosophical problem of how we know what we...



      Trade Review

      Whose Science, Whose Knowledge? represents a transition from gender to power considerations in Harding's continuous efforts to raise questions about the theory and practice of science.

      -- Shulamit Reinharz * Gender & Society *

      Harding's account offers a good insight into a variety of feminist responses to the hegemony apparently exercised by scientific thinking. Some readers will take the book as a challenge to the sociology of science to examine its arguments and assumptions in the light of standpoint theory and feminist postmodernism.

      -- Steven Yearley * British Journal of Sociology *

      This is an important book that has much to offer practicing scientists but probably will not be read by many of them. That is a shame, because its bold claims are usefully unsettling and its argument begs for engagement. One of the basic messages of Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?—that all fields of natural science are best analyzed from within the social sciences, of which they are logically a part, rather than taken as external models for the social sciences—has potential consequences for most, perhaps all, scientific practice.

      -- Rayna Rapp, New School for Social Research * Science *

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