Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Science, Technology, and Religion Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
This panel builds on the careful attention to the life of the laboratory advanced by Bruno Latour (1947–2022) over the course of his career. Rather than seeing science as a product of pure intellect, Latour was fascinated by the contingencies of the material, social, and spatial conditions of knowledge-production. Laboratories, for Latour, became places that meaningfully shape how science gets done. The papers in this panel continue this consideration of living scientific and laboratory milieus, considering how religious, ethical, political, and cosmological dimensions define scientific cultures.
Papers
- Bio-colonialism and Bad Scientific Anti-Racism: Bruno Latour and the (Violent) Politics of Religion and Science
Full Papers Available
No