alice wellintown
alicewellintown at gmail.com
Wed Apr 17 20:29:43 CDT 2013
http://vimeo.com/24229439
On Wednesday, April 17, 2013, wrote:
> Fine. Find a better comparison. But you keep personifying science. It's
> a method -- a very good one, the best one (I hope you don't expect me to
> defend that), for gaining understanding of the world, the universe in which
> we live. Again, science is a method and you're going off like a loon.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: alice wellintown <alicewellintown at gmail.com>
> To: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
> Sent: Tue, Apr 16, 2013 10:25 pm
> Subject: Re:
>
>
> A falty comparison, malignD, s/b mathematics. Algebra is a part of math.
> In any event, to rail against any of the sciences or arts is like kicking a
> machine that breaks down. If one rails against a mule that won't pull, the
> mule may respond, but a broke down engine don't got no sense, so it makes
> none to rail against it. But there is no railing here. Science is in need
> of honest critics; it is rather thin skinned and puffed up with hubris. We
> are all scientists and engineers by nature, so there is nothing wrong with
> a good hard look in the mirror. There is nothing about science that makes
> it above our critical examination, beyond our condemnation when it fails
> us, when it sins, when it hides its brain surgery butchery behind its
> rocket science superciliousness.
> On Tuesday, April 16, 2013, wrote:
>
> This is a smart post with which I agree. I would add that science is a
> method -- of investigation and discovery. To rail against science is like
> railing against algebra.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Prashant Kumar <siva.prashant.kumar at gmail.com>
> Cc: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
> Sent: Mon, Apr 15, 2013 7:36 pm
> Subject: Re:
>
> So, a couple of things; a two-step if you like: reification and
> generalisation.
>
> First: science is not a contiguous set of practices. It is not
> monolithic, and therefore its meat and method is not isolable in the way
> our dear interlocutors have presumed. So, whatever you say about the
> ethical colour of man or machine depends peculiarly on man, machine, and
> the way the former uses and is changed by, the latter. *See also*:
> technologies of the self. Variegated of course by a soupcon of historicism.
>
> What I'm saying maybe does seem irrelevant, but consider that the kind
> of science we get -- from methods to what specifically is studied, and how
> -- depends on the medley of personalities, funding and need one finds in
> modern scientific contexts. To call it "science" and then sort it into the
> right morality-bin is to discuss a *popular, a layman's, version* of
> science. It's fine, but don't expect such an analysis to say anything about
> "real science". Prejudice, greed, and the fleshandblood motivations of
> modern scientists are *indispensable *to discovery. *See also:* *Against
> Method 4th ed., *Paul Feyerabend.
>
> To say "science gave us computers" is to say quite literally nothing.
> How? What sequence of discoveries produces a computer? and, now, should I
> permute the order? What then? One more: how can we be sure of
> counterfactuals: *"**devices which wouldn't exist were it not for
> science." *?* *This is a stronger statement than it appears. Is science a*
> *unique historical process, with equally unique material correlates? *See
> also:* *Historical Ontology, *Ian Hacking.
>
> Let me say as well, this discussion calls on a particularly Western
> suppressed premise: the moral rectitude of progress itself. So what if we
> don't have computers? Fuck 'em.
>
> And now to generalisation. I'm sure you see where I'm going by now, so
> let me just say this. The choices scientists are presented with, and the
> decisions which they make, differ in substance between disciplines. And
> technological innovation from scientific discovery *is a process distinct
> from science itself. **See also:* You figure it out...
>
> P
>
>
> On 16 April 2013 08:04, alice wellintown <alicewellintown at gmail.com>wrote:
>
> I didn't say anyone attacked me. I don't think anyone did.
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 15, 2013 at 5:45 PM, Rev'd Seventy-Six
>
>
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