SCIENCE FICTION
PROMISES AND POETICS OF TECHNOSCIENCE
WORKSHOP
Monday 15 May 2017, 6.00 pm
Istituto Svizzero di Roma, via Liguria 20
“Research is the future of research.” More than a century ago Max
Weber mused in these terms on the prospective outlook of modern
science (cf. Aron 1967). In hindsight, Weber’s efforts at
distinguishing between scienti c vocation and political profession
may seem vain. His efforts tended indeed to cover up the mutual
dependency, common characteristics, and intricate relationships
between the two. Yet Weber’s sociological emphasis on the
prospective outlook of science still resonates with the “economy of
promises” (Joly 2010) that current technosciences draw upon, not
least of which the grand promise of “Converging Technologies for
Improving Human Performance” (Roco and Bainbridge 2002). Have nano-
and biotechnologies met the expectancies that they continue to
nourish? Have cognitive and computer sciences lived up to their
promises? And upon which basis is and should that be decided? This
research workshop takes up the outlined questions by homing in on
the promises and poetics of technoscience. In particular, the
workshop examines the discursive promotion of scienti c breakthrough
and technological innovation, whilst making explicit the
imaginaries, intricacies, and ironies that this promotion entails.
Discursive moves and political resonances, in and through rhetorical
gestures of “science ction,” will be examined more closely.
Therefore, the workshop brings together leading and upcoming
scholars in Science and Technology Studies (STS) from Switzerland,
Italy, and Austria. The workshop is organized by the Swiss Institute
in Rome, in collaboration with STS Italia and Interface Science-
Sociétés of the University of Lausanne.
Programma e altre informazioni qui:
http://www.istitutosvizzero.it/it/eventi/calendario/eventi-roma/science-fiction