Hum597 Daston-Syllabus s2017
Hum597 Daston-Syllabus s2017
Hum597 Daston-Syllabus s2017
UNIVERSITY
OF
WASHINGTON
SIMPSON
CENTER
FOR
THE
HUMANITIES
HUM
597A:
Observation,
Objectivity,
and
Object
Biographies:
Reading
Lorraine
Daston
1 credit C/NC microseminar | Spring
2017
online at: https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1139799
Description
This microseminar meets in conjunction with the visit of Lorraine Daston to the University of Washington
as a Katz Distinguished Lecturer in April 2017. Daston is Director of the Max Planck Institute for the
History of Science in Berlin and Visiting Professor of Social Thought and History at the University of
Chicago. A widely respected historian of science, Daston has published on the history of probability and
statistics, wonders in early modern science, the emergence of the scientific fact, scientific models, objects
of scientific inquiry, the moral authority of nature, and the history of scientific objectivity. Her recent books
include How Reason Almost Lost Its Mind: The Strange Career of Cold War Rationality (co-editor, 2014),
Histories of Scientific Observation (co-editor, 2011), and Objectivity (with Peter Galison, 2010).
The focus of this seminar will be on Daston's pivotal publications on historical transformations of ideals of
objectivity, biographies of scientific objects, observational practices and conventions of image-making.
These have been influential well beyond historical science studies (her home discipline); they have
inspired generations of scholars who are committed to integrating historical, philosophical, and
social/cultural studies of the sciences. Daston has also written on the divergent disciplinary and
interdisciplinary approaches that make up the cognate fields of science, technology & society studies
represented in our own graduate Certificate in Science, Technology & Society Studies, so her visit is an
occasion to reflect on the vision that animates this program as we conclude our second year.
Readings
Available on the Canvas course website.
Seminar meetings
We will meet in the Simpson Center seminar room (Communications 202) unless otherwise noted.
One common reading is assigned for the two seminar meetings before Dastons visit. Each member of
the seminar is asked to report on this common reading and one additional reading that represents an
aspect of Dastons scholarship that is especially relevant to your own research.
Discussion post I: If youre revisiting Daston & Galisons work on objectivity, how does it read to you
now? What new questions, issues, implications would you like to discuss? If this is new reading for you,
what do you find compelling, puzzling, problematic? For everyone: how does this genealogy of ideals of
objectivity relate to the work youre doing in your primary area of research interest? And how does it
relate to Dastons account of the current state of STS and HPS?
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Discussion post II: What issues, implications, and questions raised by these readings would you like to
discuss with Daston? And, as for your first post, how do these accounts of observation, the vagaries of
reasoning from and about things, and the formation scientific objects bear on your own research?
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Discussion post III: What did you take away from Dastons lecture, colloquium, and/or discussion over
coffee? What themes, points of continuity or discontinuity do you see between the work on objectivity,
observation, and objects that weve read and her recent work on computing, algorithms, and big science?
Whats the relevance of her work to your areas of research interest?
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Seminar III: April 24, 3:30-5:30: reflection on Dastons visit based on your third discussion posts.
Wylie | Spring 2017
Additional readings
This is a short list of additional sources that may be of interest; much more can be found on her website
at https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/en/users/ldaston
Do please post any other sources relevant to the seminar on the everything else discussion board on
the Canvas course website.
Daston, L. (2016). History of Science Without 'Structure', in R. J. Richards, & L. Daston (Eds.),
Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions at Fifty: Reflections on a Science Classic. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, pp. 115-132.
Daston, L. (2016). Cloud Physiognomy. Representations 135(1): 45-71.
Daston, L. (2015). Epistemic Images, in A. Payne (Ed.), Vision and Its Instruments: Art, Science,
and Technology in Early Modern Europe. University Park, Pennsylvania: Penn State University Press,
pp. 13-35.
Daston, L. and G. M. Most (2015). History of Science and History of Philologies, Isis 106(2): 378-
390.
Daston, L. (2014). The Naturalistic Fallacy is Modern, Isis, 105(3): 579-587.
Erickson, P., Klein, J. L., Daston, L., Lemov, R., Sturm, T., & Gordin, M. D. (2013). How Reason
Almost Lost Its Mind: The Strange Career of Cold War Rationality. Chicago: The University of
Chicago Press.
Daston, L. (2012). The Sciences of the Archive, Osiris 27(1), 156-187.
Daston, L. (2010). How Nature is a Garden, Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 35(3-4): 215-230.
Daston, L. (2009). Academic Excellence (review of How Professors Think by Michle Lamont),
European Journal of Sociology 50(3): 478-482.
Daston, L. (2008). On Scientific Observation, Isis 99(1): 97-110.
Daston, L. (2004). Taking Note(s), Isis 95(3): 443-338.
Defke, Uta (2012). The Observer (profile of Lorraine Daston), Max Planck Research, pp. 87-92.