Results for 'ingineer, professionalization, sociology of technology'

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  1.  22
    L’apport de la sociologie de la technologie à la professionnalisation de l’ingénieur.Michel Lejeune - 2015 - Revue Phronesis 4 (2):34-41.
    Professionalization of the engineer, from the perspective of sociology of technology, registrant in the statements of principle and Canadian standards of accreditation of university engineering programs. The question of the development of technologies (production, dissemination and appropriation) is attached in all respects with personal and social qualities of which refer engineer schools of engineering and regulatory bodies. The engineering profession s’roots from elsewhere in industrial ans social sectors increasingly sensitive to the social dimensions of technology, considering the (...)
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  2.  21
    La place de la recherche en sciences humaines, sociales et économiques dans les écoles d’ingénieurs.Michel Sonntag, François Gitzhofer & Michel Lejeune - 2015 - Revue Phronesis 4 (2):1.
    Professionalization of the engineer, from the perspective of sociology of technology, registrant in the statements of principle and Canadian standards of accreditation of university engineering programs. The question of the development of technologies (production, dissemination and appropriation) is attached in all respects with personal and social qualities of which refer engineer schools of engineering and regulatory bodies. The engineering profession s’roots from elsewhere in industrial ans social sectors increasingly sensitive to the social dimensions of technology, considering the (...)
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  3.  17
    Sociology of Low Expectations: Recalibration as Innovation Work in Biomedicine.Clare Williams, Gabrielle Samuel & John Gardner - 2015 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 40 (6):998-1021.
    Social scientists have drawn attention to the role of hype and optimistic visions of the future in providing momentum to biomedical innovation projects by encouraging innovation alliances. In this article, we show how less optimistic, uncertain, and modest visions of the future can also provide innovation projects with momentum. Scholars have highlighted the need for clinicians to carefully manage the expectations of their prospective patients. Using the example of a pioneering clinical team providing deep brain stimulation to children and young (...)
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  4.  16
    Psychiatry and the Sociology of Novelty: Negotiating the US National Institute of Mental Health “Research Domain Criteria”.Martyn Pickersgill - 2019 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 44 (4):612-633.
    In the United States, the National Institute of Mental Health is seeking to encourage researchers to move away from diagnostic tools like the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. A key mechanism for this is the “Research Domain Criteria” initiative, closely associated with former NIMH Director Thomas Insel. This article examines how key figures in US psychiatry construct the purpose, nature, and implications of the ambiguous RDoC project; that is, how its novelty is constituted through discourse. In this paper, (...)
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  5.  41
    Beyond The Anticipatory Corpse: Medicine, Power, and the Care of the Dying: A Theoretical and Methodological Intervention into the Sociology of Brain Implant Surgery.Black Hawk Hancock & Daniel R. Morrison - 2016 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 41 (6):659-678.
    Drawing on and extending the Foucaultian philosophical framework that Jeffrey Bishop develops in his masterful book, The Anticipatory Corpse: Medicine, Power, and the Care of the Dying, we undertake a sociological analysis of the neurological procedure—deep brain stimulation —which implants electrodes in the brain, powered by a pacemaker-like device, for the treatment of movement disorders. Following Bishop’s work, we carry out this analysis through a two-fold strategy. First, we examine how a multidisciplinary team evaluates candidates for this implant at a (...)
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  6.  9
    Sociology, science, and the end of philosophy: how society shapes brains, gods, maths, and logics.Sal P. Restivo - 2017 - London, United Kingdom: Palgrave MacMillan.
    This book offers a unique analysis of how ideas about science and technology in the public and scientific imaginations (in particular about maths, logic, the gene, the brain, god, and robots) perpetuate the false reality that values and politics are separate from scientific knowledge and its applications. These ideas are reinforced by cultural myths about free will and individualism. Restivo makes a compelling case for a synchronistic approach in the study of these notoriously 'hard' cases, arguing that their significance (...)
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  7.  89
    Technology and ethical dilemmas in a medical setting: Privacy, professional autonomy, life and death. [REVIEW]Gloria Lankshear & David Mason - 2001 - Ethics and Information Technology 3 (3):223-233.
    A growing literature addresses the ethical implications of electronic surveillance at work, frequently assigning ethical priority to values such as the right to privacy. This paper suggests that, in practice, the issues are sociologically more complex than some accounts suggest. This is because many workplace electronic technologies not designed or deployed for surveillance purposes nevertheless embody surveillance capacity. This capacity may not be immediately obvious to participants or lend itself to simple deployment. Moreover, because of their primary functions, such systems (...)
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  8.  30
    As if you were hiring a new employee: on pig veterinarians’ perceptions of professional roles and relationships in the context of smart sensing technologies in pig husbandry in the Netherlands and Germany.Mona F. Giersberg & Franck L. B. Meijboom - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-14.
    Veterinarians are increasingly confronted with new technologies, such as Precision Livestock Farming (PLF), which allows for automated animal monitoring on commercial farms. At the same time, we lack information on how veterinarians, as stakeholders who may play a mediating role in the public debate on livestock farming, perceive the use and the impact of such technologies. This study explores the meaning veterinarians attribute to the application of PLF in the context of public concerns related to pig production. Semi-structured interviews were (...)
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  9.  18
    Contributions from the sociology of technology to the study of innovation systems.Naubahar Sharif - 2004 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 17 (3):83-105.
    Literature in the area of innovation systems (IS) has been growing in importance and the IS approach has become well established. It is widely used in North America, Western Europe and Scandinavia, both in academic contexts and also as a framework or tool for policymaking. This paper examines work by sociologists, historians and others who have attempted to provide new insights into the nature of technology, in order to determine how the new sociology of technology literature—particularly social (...)
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  10.  44
    Expectations of artificial intelligence and the performativity of ethics: Implications for communication governance.John D. Kelleher, Marguerite Barry & Aphra Kerr - 2020 - Big Data and Society 7 (1).
    This article draws on the sociology of expectations to examine the construction of expectations of ‘ethical AI’ and considers the implications of these expectations for communication governance. We first analyse a range of public documents to identify the key actors, mechanisms and issues which structure societal expectations around artificial intelligence and an emerging discourse on ethics. We then explore expectations of AI and ethics through a survey of members of the public. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings (...)
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  11.  14
    Eugenics and the New Genetics in Britain: Examining Contemporary Professionals' Accounts.Amanda Amos, Sarah Cunningham-Burley & Anne Kerr - 1998 - Science, Technology and Human Values 23 (2):175-198.
    This article explores the accounts of eugenics made by a small but important group of British scientists and clinicians working on the new genetics as applied to human health. These scientists and clinicians used special rhetorical strategies for distancing the new genetics from eugenics and to sustain their professional autonomy. They drew a number of boundaries or distinctions between eugenics and their own field, describing eugenics as politically distorted "bad science, " as being technically unfeasible, a feature of totalitarian regimes, (...)
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  12.  8
    Scaling Up: The Institution of Chemical Engineers and the Rise of a New Profession.Colin Divall & Sean F. Johnston - 2000 - Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.
    Chemical engineering - as a recognised skill in the workplace, as an academic discipline, and as an acknowledged profession - is scarcely a century old. Yet from a contested existence before the First World War, chemical engineering had become one of the 'big four' engineering professions in Britain, and a major contributor to Western economies, by the end of the twentieth century. The subject had distinct national trajectories. In Britain - too long seen as shaped by American experiences - the (...)
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  13.  17
    The crisis of journalism reconsidered: democratic culture, professional codes, digital future.Jeffrey C. Alexander, Elizabeth Butler Breese & Marîa Luengo (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This collection of original essays brings a dramatically different perspective to bear on the contemporary "crisis of journalism." Rather than seeing technological and economic change as the primary causes of current anxieties, The Crisis of Journalism Reconsidered draws attention to the role played by the cultural commitments of journalism itself. Linking these professional ethics to the democratic aspirations of the broader societies in which journalists ply their craft, it examines how the new technologies are being shaped to sustain value commitments (...)
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  14. A world made of knowledge: pathways into the knowledge society.Nico Stehr (ed.) - 2024 - New Jersey: World Scientific.
    More than three decades after Gernot Böhme and Nico Stehr began to explore modern "knowledge societies", the concept has transformed sociological inquiry into the dynamics of contemporary society. But a quick Google search shows that the term is not only limited to academic circles. Moreover, international bodies such as the OECD underline the importance of transformative processes towards knowledge societies for global tertiary education and point to the importance of "inclusive knowledge societies for sustainable development". This book brings together Nico (...)
     
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  15.  32
    Outreach Work in Paris: A Moral Ethnography of Social Work and Nursing with Homeless People.Daniel Cefaï - 2015 - Human Studies 38 (1):137-156.
    How do we take care of homeless people? A field study with a humanitarian NGO, the Samusocial de Paris, France, gave the author the opportunity to observe nursing and social work with homeless people. The first part of the article recounts how the public problem of “grande exclusion” emerged in France and the kind of value judgments and controversies it gave rise to. He accounts for his tactics not to take sides for any of the definitions and evaluations available in (...)
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  16.  15
    What's at Stake in the Sociology of Technology? A Reply to Pinch and to Winner.Steve Woolgar - 1993 - Science, Technology and Human Values 18 (4):523-529.
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  17.  9
    Technology and professional identity of librarians: the making of the cybrarian.Deborah Hicks - 2014 - Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference.
    This book brings into focus both the positive and negative aspects that technology places on the professional identity of librarians, highlighting the new methods involved in data management, communication, and library information education and research.
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  18.  27
    Beyond the hype: ‘acceptable futures’ for AI and robotic technologies in healthcare.Giulia De Togni, S. Erikainen, S. Chan & S. Cunningham-Burley - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-10.
    AI and robotic technologies attract much hype, including utopian and dystopian future visions of technologically driven provision in the health and care sectors. Based on 30 interviews with scientists, clinicians and other stakeholders in the UK, Europe, USA, Australia, and New Zealand, this paper interrogates how those engaged in developing and using AI and robotic applications in health and care characterize their future promise, potential and challenges. We explore the ways in which these professionals articulate and navigate a range of (...)
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  19.  34
    Doctors and rules: a sociology of professional values.Joseph M. Jacob - 1988 - New York: Routledge.
    Out of a reassertion of old ways, this book presents a new blueprint for future professional conduct.
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  20.  30
    Uncovering social structures and informational prejudices to reduce inequity in delivery and uptake of new molecular technologies.Sara Filoche, Peter Stone, Fiona Cram, Sondra Bacharach, Anthony Dowell, Dianne Sika-Paotonu, Angela Beard, Judy Ormandy, Christina Buchanan, Michelle Thunders & Kevin Dew - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (11):763-767.
    Advances in molecular technologies have the potential to help remedy health inequities through earlier detection and prevention; if, however, their delivery and uptake are not more carefully considered, there is a very real risk that existing inequities in access and use will be further exacerbated. We argue this risk relates to the way that information and knowledge about the technology is both acquired and shared, or not, between health practitioners and their patients.A healthcare system can be viewed as a (...)
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  21.  71
    Cows desiring to be milked? Milking robots and the co-evolution of ethics and technology on Dutch dairy farms.Clemens Driessen & Leonie F. M. Heutinck - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (1):3-20.
    Ethical concerns regarding agricultural practices can be found to co-evolve with technological developments. This paper aims to create an understanding of ethics that is helpful in debating technological innovation by studying such a co-evolution process in detail: the development and adoption of the milking robot. Over the last decade an increasing number of milking robots, or automatic milking systems (AMS), has been adopted, especially in the Netherlands and a few other Western European countries. The appraisal of this new technology (...)
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  22.  28
    A Portrait of Assisted Reproduction in Mexico: Scientific, Political, and Cultural Interactions.Sandra P. González-Santos - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    This book paints a comprehensive portrait of Mexico’s system of assisted reproduction first from a historical perspective, then from a more contemporary viewpoint. Based on a detailed analysis of books and articles published between the 1950s and 1980s, the first section tells the story of how the epistemic, normative, and material infrastructure of the assisted reproduction system was built. It traces the professionalization process of assisted reproduction as a medical field and the establishment of its professional association. Drawing on ethnographic (...)
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  23.  32
    The social shaping of a diagnosis in Next Generation Sequencing.Janneke M. L. Kuiper, Pascal Borry, Danya F. Vears & Ine Van Hoyweghen - 2021 - New Genetics and Society 40 (4):425-448.
    Although Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) has increased our ability to test and diagnose, its results are often not clear-cut and require a complex interpretation and negotiation process by both healthcare professionals and patients involved. In this paper, we explore how diagnoses identified through NGS are socially shaped under influence of the broader social context. Using an analytical framework stemming from the sociology of health and illness and science and technology studies, with a focus on the construction of diagnosis (...)
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  24.  21
    The Paradox of Participation Experiments.Alexander Bogner - 2012 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 37 (5):506-527.
    An ongoing trend in technology policy has been to advocate participation. However, the author claims that lay citizens’ participation typically materializes in the form of a laboratory experiment at present. That is, lay participation as currently organized by professional participation experts under controlled conditions rarely is linked to public controversies, to the pursuit of political participation or to individual concerns. Derived from qualitative research on two citizen conferences, the author shows empirically that in practice, this laboratory participation leads to (...)
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  25.  20
    Sociology of science: selected readings.Barry Barnes - 1972 - Harmondsworth,: Penguin Books.
    Compilation of selected readings on the sociology of science - includes papers on the emergence and institutionalization of modern science and its relationships to society, structural and cultural factors, relations between science and technology, scientific entrepreneurship and the utilization of research, political aspects, science policy and its goals, the impact of science on social change, etc. References.
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  26.  26
    A History of Light and Colour Measurement: Science in the Shadows.Sean F. Johnston - 2001 - Bristol, UK: Institute of Physics Press.
    2003 Paul Bunge Prize of the Hans R. Jenemann Foundation for the History of Scientific Instruments Judging the brightness and color of light has long been contentious. Alternately described as impossible and routine, it was beset by problems both technical and social. How trustworthy could such measurements be? Was the best standard of intensity a gas lamp, an incandescent bulb, or a glowing pool of molten metal? And how much did the answers depend on the background of the specialist? A (...)
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  27.  21
    Warrior Charisma and the Spiritualization of Violence.Bryan Turner - 2003 - Body and Society 9 (4):93-108.
    Norbert Elias (2001) produced one of the most influential theories on the history of violence in human societies in terms of ‘the civilizing process’. With the transformation of feudalism, the rise of bourgeois society and the development of the modern state, interpersonal violence was increasingly regulated by social norms that emphasized self-restraint and personal discipline. His theory was a moral pedagogics of the body in which the ‘passions’ are self-regulated through detailed social regimes. While his theory is influential, it has (...)
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  28. Assen yossifov.Professionalization Of Scientists - 1979 - In János Farkas (ed.), Sociology of science and research. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó.
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  29.  4
    Sociologies of Religion: National Traditions.Anthony Blasi & Giuseppe Giordan (eds.) - 2015 - Brill.
    _Sociologies of Religion: National Traditions_ presents fourteen histories of the sociological study of religion in a diverse set of nations. The authors narrate the stories behind major personages, theoretical traditions, seminal works, research institutes, and professional associations.
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  30.  85
    The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in Sociology and History of Technology (25th Anniversary Edition with new preface).Wiebe E. Bijker, Thomas P. Hughes & Trevor Pinch (eds.) - 1987 - MIT Press.
  31.  17
    William Leiss on Lifting Technology's Thumb.Frederick Ferré - 1992 - Dialogue 31 (2):321-.
    Philosophers need not be located in departments of philosophy in order to be worth reading. Here is a work eminently warranting attention from professional philosophers, perhaps all the more because its author, William Leiss writes from a variety of alternative perspectives. His first academic position was in Political Science and Environmental Studies at the University of Regina. From there he travelled to York University as Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, taking a year out to serve as Associate Professor of (...) at the University of Toronto before returning to York and again adding Political Science to his duties in Environmental Studies. Since 1980 he has been Professor of Communication at Simon Fraser University. Although originally a New Yorker, with academic credentials from south of the border, he now writes with distinctly Canadian examples, outlook and style. (shrink)
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  32.  33
    Design and Society: Social Issues in Technological Design.Cameron Shelley - 2017 - Springer Verlag.
    This book discusses concepts of good design from social perspectives grounded in anthropology, sociology and philosophy, the goal being to provide readers with an awareness of social issues to help them in their work as design professionals. Each chapter covers a specific area of good practice in design, explaining and applying a small set of related concepts to a series of case studies, and including a list of additional sources recommended for further study. The book does not assume any (...)
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  33.  85
    Conceptual Problems with Performance Enhancing Technology in Sport.Emily Ryall - 2013 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 73:129-143.
    The majority of – usually moral – problems inherent in elite sport, such as whether athletes should be able to take particular drugs, wear particular clothing, or utilise particular tools, arguably stem from a conceptual one based on faulty logic and competing values. Sport is a human enterprise that represents a multitude of human compulsions, desires and needs; the urge to be competitive, to co-operate, to excel, to develop, to play, to love and be loved, and to find meaning in (...)
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  34.  15
    Sociological versus metascientific views of technological Risk assessment.Deborah Mayo - 1997 - In Kristin Sharon Shrader-Frechette & Laura Westra (eds.), Technology and Values. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 217.
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  35.  44
    Why artificial intelligence needs sociology of knowledge: parts I and II.Harry Collins - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-15.
    Recent developments in artificial intelligence based on neural nets—deep learning and large language models which together I refer to as NEWAI—have resulted in startling improvements in language handling and the potential to keep up with changing human knowledge by learning from the internet. Nevertheless, examples such as ChatGPT, which is a ‘large language model’, have proved to have no moral compass: they answer queries with fabrications with the same fluency as they provide facts. I try to explain why this is, (...)
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  36.  11
    Specialization in Action: The Genealogy and Current State of Assisted Reproduction.Sandra P. González-Santos - 2014 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 34 (1-2):33-42.
    This article has two objectives: the first, to analyze the professionalization process of assisted reproduction (AR) in order to see how AR is consolidating into an independent field within medicine, and the second, to see how AR arrived and was assimilated into Mexican culture. As opposed to other projects that have traced back the story of a particular specialty to see how it emerged as such, this article looks at an ongoing process: specialization in action. By analyzing the data collected (...)
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  37.  83
    The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of the City.Joseph S. Biehl, Samantha Noll & Sharon M. Meagher (eds.) - 2019 - London, UK: Routledge.
    The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of the City is an outstanding reference source to this exciting subject and the first collection of its kind. Comprising 40 chapters by a team of international contributors, the Handbook is divided into clear sections addressing the following central topics: -/- • Historical Philosophical Engagements with Cities -/- • Modern and Contemporary Philosophical Theories of the City -/- • Urban Aesthetics -/- • Urban Politics -/- • Citizenship -/- • Urban Environments and the Creation/Destruction of (...)
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  38. Technology, Pessimism, and Postmodernism. Sociology of Sciences: A Yearbook, vol. XVII.Yaron Ezrahi, Everett Mendelsohn & Howard P. Segal - 1999 - Utopian Studies 10 (1):203-205.
  39.  36
    Potentiality, intentionality, and embodiment: a genetic phenomenological sociology of Apple’s technology.Vincent Qing Zhang - 2022 - AI and Society 37 (4):1729-1737.
    Scholars refute the dichotomy of subject and object in the study of technology. Basing on relational ontology and revised empirical study, namely the social historical phenomenology of technology, inspired by post-phenomenology and actor-network theory, this study adopts an approach informed by the genetic phenomenological sociology (Zhang 2017; 2020) of technology, and examines the formation of Apple’s technology in the process of its emergence and diffusion. Unlike post-phenomenology and actor-network theory, which mainly examine the role of (...)
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  40.  23
    Shifting the geography of reason: gender, science and religion.Marina Paola Banchetti-Robino & Clevis Headley (eds.) - 2007 - Newcastle, U.K.: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    MARINA PAOLA BANCHETTI-ROBINO is Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Florida Atlantic University. Her areas of research include phenomenology, philosophy of language, philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, and zoosemiotics. Her publications have appeared in such journals as Synthese, Husserl Studies, Idealistic Studies, Philosophy East and West, and The Review of Metaphysics. She has also contributed essays to The Role of Pragmatics in Contemporary Philosophy (1997), Feminist Phenomenology (2000), and Islamic Philosophy and Occidental Phenomenology on the Perennial (...)
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  41.  10
    Information and Communications Technology in the Professional Training of Future Professionals in the Field of Culture and Art.Oleksii Rohotchenko, Tetyana Zuziak, Svitlana Kizim, Svitlana Rohotchenko & Oleksandr Shynin - 2021 - Postmodern Openings 12 (3):134-153.
    The article deals with the self-education of future specialists in the field of culture and art within the context of philosophical, psychological, and pedagogical studies of the postmodern era. This substantiates the need to use e-learning in professional training. The use of cloud computing technologies is one of the educational process’ innovations. As shown by our research and personal experience implementing cloud computing technologies into the educational process proves to be feasible for training future professionals in the field of culture (...)
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  42.  14
    Can the University Escape From the Labyrinth of Technology? Part 1: Rethinking the Intellectual and Professional Division of Labor and its Knowledge Infrastructure.Willem H. Vanderburg - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (3):171-177.
    The role tradition played in preindustrial societies has been supplanted by the decisions of countless specialists organized by means of an intellectual and professional division of labor shaping a knowledge infrastructure that sustains these decisions. Three limitations of this knowledge system are discussed: (a) on the macrolevel, it imposes an end-of-pipe approach for dealing with the undesired consequences of decision making, rarely getting to the root of any problem; (b) on the microlevel, individual practitioners of a specialty are trapped in (...)
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  43.  13
    The idea of the Biblical economics: Utopia or chance in the face of the contemporary transformations of the sphere of work.Piotr Kopiec - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-5.
    The future of labour appears as one of the crucial themes of the sociological and economic reflections. Sociologists and economists proclaim a shrinking scope of labour and, consequently, a certain elitism of jobs. In their opinion, professional work will be a privilege for those who are more skilled and better educated, and those who are able to face the challenges of the rapid technological progress. This will be causing an unknown future of the reality of both common unemployment and enforced (...)
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  44.  9
    Didactic opportunities and terms of use of web-quest technology in professional training of students.Aleksandra Vasilievna Deryabkina - 2021 - Kant 38 (1):217-222.
    Educational web quest is an example of the introduction of the Internet in the learning process. Using the web quest as a pedagogical technology allows students to form and develop competencies in the use of information and communication technologies in the performance of educational tasks, research skills, skills of analysis and systematization of information received, teamwork skills and responsibility for the quality of their training. The article describes the didactic possibilities of an educational web quest in the educational process (...)
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  45. From critical theory of technology to the rational critique of rationality.Andrew Feenberg - 2008 - Social Epistemology 22 (1):5 – 28.
    This paper explores the sense in which modern societies can be said to be rational. Social rationality cannot be understood on the model of an idealized image of scientific method. Neither science nor society conforms to this image. Nevertheless, critique is routinely silenced by neo-liberal and technocratic arguments that appeal to social simulacra of science. This paper develops a critical strategy for addressing the resistance of rationality to rational critique. Romantic rejection of reason has proven less effective than strategies that (...)
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  46.  22
    A sociology of caravans.Peter Beilharz & Sian Supski - 2017 - Thesis Eleven 142 (1):34-43.
    Why do caravans matter? Australians, like others, holiday in them, travel in them, cook, eat, drink, play, sleep and have sex in them. They also live in them, often involuntarily. Caravans have a longer history than this, however caravan life has almost no presence in existing historical or cultural sociology scholarship. Our immediate interest is in caravans in Australia, modernity and mobility. Some broader interest is apparent. Theoretical arguments about mobility on a global scale have been developed by Bauman (...)
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  47.  29
    Warren Schmaus is Professor of Philosophy at the Illinois Institute of Technology, where he has taught since completing graduate studies in the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of Durkheim's Philosophy of Science and the Sociology of Knowledge (Chicago, 1994), in additional to many articles concerning the philosophy.Gregory Moynahan, Thomas A. Ryckman & David Hyder - 2003 - Perspectives on Science 11 (1).
  48.  6
    Risky Science? Perception and Negotiation of Risk in University Bioscience.Dilshani Sarathchandra - 2017 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 37 (2):71-84.
    Scientists’ risk perceptions play a critical role in determining the risks that they are willing to accept in their work. This study investigates academic bioscientists’ risk perceptions by examining the judgments working scientists employ in day-to-day research decisions. The study draws from theoretical and methodological underpinnings of Sociology of Science and Risk Analysis. Using data gathered from 694 survey responses of bioscientists at a land grant research university in the U.S. Midwest, this study identifies four dimensions of perceived risk (...)
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  49.  13
    Sociology of science: a critical Canadian introduction.Myra J. Hird - 2012 - Don Mills, Ont.: Oxford University Press.
    Sociology of Science: A Critical Canadian Introduction provides an overview of how sociology approaches science and, to a lesser extent, technology. It examines how science developed as a set of theories about both what we know and how we know. The book provides a succinct critical examination of the current state of science studies with a particular emphasis on research conducted by Canadian scholars. Hird illustrates that science studies offers useful perspectives on current and ongoing sociological debates, (...)
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  50.  12
    Custom; an essay on social codes.Ferdinand Tönnies - 1961 - [New York]: Free Press of Glencoe.
    Excerpt from Custom an Essay on Social Codes Still a professor extraordinarius and thus not en cumbered with the time-consuming duties of an Ordinarius (a full professor), T onnies was living in the small town of Eutin, about an hour's ride on the train to Kiel, the seat of his university, and engaged in a prolific literary and scholarly pro duction on a great variety of theoretical as well as practical sociological, political and economic prob lems. Most of his articles (...)
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