Public uptake of science: a case for institutional reflexivity
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Public Understanding of Science
- Vol. 2 (4), 321-337
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0963-6625/2/4/003
Abstract
This paper attempts to advance the notion of reflexivity as a key element of improving current understanding of the public understanding of science problem, and for improving the relations between science and its public more generally. By reflexivity here I mean more systematic processes of exploration of the prior commitments framing knowledge, in the way it has been introduced in sociological debates on modernity, rather than the more methodological-epistemological principle of consistency as it has been developed in sociology of science. The dominant framing of the public understanding of science issue corresponds with wider assumptions about the relationship between science and laypeople. Laypeople are assumed to be essentially defensive, risk- and uncertainty-averse, and unreflexive. Science on the other hand is assumed to be the epitome of reflexive self-criticism. This paper draws upon research in PUS to show that laypeople display considerable reflexive negotiation of their identity in relationships to science and scientific institutions. The latter, on the other hand, show considerable deep resistance to recognizing and reconsidering the unstated models of the public which structure their scientific discourses. This only makes the public understanding problem worse. Reflexive institutions would be needed to place science-public interactions on a more constructive footing.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Actor-Networks and Ambivalence: General Practitioners in the UK Cervical Screening ProgrammeSocial Studies of Science, 1993
- How to be Universal: Some Cybernetic Strategies, 1943-70Social Studies of Science, 1993
- Lay Discourses of Science: Science-in-General, Science-in-Particular, and SelfScience, Technology, & Human Values, 1992
- Modernity and AmbivalenceTheory, Culture & Society, 1990
- The public understanding of scienceNature, 1989
- Public Experiments and Displays of Virtuosity: The Core-Set RevisitedSocial Studies of Science, 1988
- Mixing Humans and Nonhumans Together: The Sociology of a Door-CloserSocial Problems, 1988
- Artisan Resistance and Evolution in Britain, 1819-1848Osiris, 1987
- Interests and Explanation in the Social Study of ScienceSocial Studies of Science, 1981
- Public Opinion About Science and ScientistsPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1959