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Speaking for nature and nation: Biologists as public intellectuals in Cold War culture.

机译:代表自然与民族:冷战文化中的生物学家作为公共知识分子。

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摘要

The American scientific community was at the height of its political power just after World War II. Physical scientists wielded especially strong influence within the federal government as Cold War attitudes and military spending became entrenched elements of American culture. Biologists, on the other hand, found themselves mostly shut out of the federal advisory system. Between 1946 and 1972, a group of increasingly vocal biologists---mostly geneticists---attempted to influence public attitudes and policies by taking their scientific and political messages directly to the public. H. J. Muller, L. C. Dunn, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Bentley Glass, Joshua Lederberg, and their sympathetic colleagues used media interviews, educational pamphlets, public conferences, radio broadcasts (including appearances on the U.S. Department of State's Voice of America network), newspaper columns, and advertising as avenues to shape public policy on urgent biological issues. They became especially involved in discrediting the Soviet academician Trofim Lysenko, reconceptualizing the high school science curriculum, and advocating a role for the life sciences, especially exobiology, in the American space program. This dissertation uses case studies of each of these areas to explore the particular challenges biologists faced in locating outlets for their non-scientific views. The waning influence of scientists as public spokesmen in the 1970s coincided with a growing separation between fame and merit in the American academy. In the post-Cold War era, scientific success is indicated through financial success, not ideological triumph. The decline of scientific public intellectualism---one of the legacies of the end of the Cold War---represents a fundamental rupture of the alliance between scientific and national achievement.
机译:第二次世界大战后,美国科学界正处于政治力量的鼎盛时期。随着冷战的态度和军事开支成为美国文化中根深蒂固的元素,物理科学家在联邦政府内部产生了特别强烈的影响。另一方面,生物学家发现自己大多被排除在联邦咨询系统之外。在1946年到1972年之间,一群越来越发声的生物学家-大多数是遗传学家-试图通过直接向公众传播科学和政治信息来影响公众的态度和政策。 HJ Muller,LC Dunn,Theodosius Dobzhansky,Bentley Glass,Joshua Lederberg和他们的同情同事使用了媒体采访,教育手册,公开会议,广播(包括在美国国务院的美国之音网络上露面),报纸专栏和做广告,以制定有关紧急生物问题的公共政策。他们特别参与了抹黑苏联院士Trofim Lysenko的声誉,重新定义了高中科学课程的概念,并倡导生命科学,尤其是外生生物学在美国太空计划中的作用。本文通过对这些领域的案例研究来探讨生物学家在寻找非科学观点时面临的特殊挑战。 1970年代,科学家作为公共发言人的影响力正在减弱,而与此同时,美国科学院的名誉与功绩之间的差距越来越大。在后冷战时代,科学上的成功是通过财务上的成功而不是意识形态上的胜利来表示的。科学公共知识主义的衰落是冷战结束的遗产之一,代表着科学与国家成就之间的同盟关系的根本破裂。

著录项

  • 作者

    Wolfe, Audra Jayne.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Pennsylvania.;

  • 授予单位 University of Pennsylvania.;
  • 学科 History of Science.; History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2002
  • 页码 263 p.
  • 总页数 263
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 自然科学史 ; 美洲史 ;
  • 关键词

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