The “New World of Sciences”: The Temporality of the Research Agenda and the Unending Ambitions of Science

Isis 103 (4):727-734 (2012)
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Abstract

Lists foreground multiplicity: both of objects to be pursued and, for distant objects, of far-flung networks enabling their pursuit. The future-oriented or projective list stretches such networks not only around the world but forward through time. Research agendas are one kind of future-oriented, projective list. Sketching how such lists have functioned over time, from Francis Bacon's “The New World of Sciences, or Desiderata” to today's desiderata lists, suggests how an early modern model of imperial expansion has shaped, in unintended ways, a scientific rhetoric of collaborative advance on shared targets

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Science Artisans and Open Science Hardware.Denisa Kera - 2017 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 37 (2):97-111.
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