Mario Biagioli
Autor von Galilei, der Höfling
Über den Autor
Mario Biagioli is Distinguished Professor of Law, Science and Technology Studies, and History at the University of California, Davis. Vincent Antonin Lpinay is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Medialab at Sciences Po (Paris).
Werke von Mario Biagioli
Scientific Authorship: Credit and Intellectual Property in Science (2002) — Herausgeber — 20 Exemplare
Making and Unmaking Intellectual Property: Creative Production in Legal and Cultural Perspective (2011) — Herausgeber — 16 Exemplare
Gaming the Metrics: Misconduct and Manipulation in Academic Research (Infrastructures) (2020) 9 Exemplare
Nature Engaged: Science in Practice from the Renaissance to the Present (Palgrave Studies in Cultural and Intellectual… (2012) — Herausgeber — 6 Exemplare
The anthropology of incommensurability 1 Exemplar
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- 1955-12-17
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- University of California, Davis
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As such, his story was not one of speaking scientific truth to power, as it is often told, but a courtier trying to make a living in a new environment. He expanded beyond his original identity as a mathematician into a new natural philosopher. Since the university system was dominated by Aristotelian philosophers, his legitimacy was found at court - and at court alone. A prince and eventually the pope served as his audience and could freely support any ideas that they deemed appropriate. The professionals/courtiers were not yet bound by accreditation by groups like the Royal Society in Britain. Their "accreditation" came from the court and the patronage system alone.
Galileo's well-told story, then, needs to be contextually situated in this light. He was trying to persuade princes to support him financially and was shut down when his patron decided to overthrow Galileo as the patron's "favorite." (This overthrow of the sovereign's favorite can also be seen historically in Queen Elizabeth's shunning of Sir Walter Raleigh after Raleigh married a court-maid.) Galileo, of course, belonged to the prior age more than the coming age. While science can speak truth to power today, its institutional identity and strong professional organizations lay as its supporting source of integrity. Without these modern innovations, scientists, academicians, and intellectuals are mere fodder for rulers.
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