Tag Archives: Science Policy

BSHS Roundtable on “Science for the People”

I was honoured to convene and chair this exceptionally stimulating roundtable on “Science for the People” – with James Wilsdon, Jon Topham, Charlotte Sleigh and Stuart Prior – and our shifting ideas of & relationship between “science” and “the people”, and surprising constants in the history and present of science, politics, culture, and in what we actually understand as science. We covered ground from the Society for the Diffusion for Useful Knowledge, to the role of scientific societies, and government science advice, the complexity of what we understand as science in the context of its intersections with “useful”, “applied” and “commercially valuable science”, the deceptive lure of scientistic simplicity, in such slogans as “following the science” or nationalist conceptions of “science superpowers” – but also how science historians can best make an impact in public science discourse, via engaging in such initiatives as Wikipedia, and the access it gives to a breadth of audiences, and huge numbers of them.

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