Review; Science & Capital - Radical Essays on Science & Technology

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A review of a new collection of articles expressing a radical critique of science as an aspect of domination in class society.

Submitted by Red Marriott on February 18, 2011

Livewire Publications 2011.
ISBN 978-0-9567240-0-7 UK £8.00

Contents;
Introduction - Phil Meyler
Abyss - Jaime Semprun
And Yet It Moves - Boy Igor
No to Electronic Watchtowers: elements of reflection on video surveillance - The Collective
How to Defend Society Against Science (extracts) - Paul Feyeraband
Science & Authority - Mikhail Bakunin

The Dublin based Livewire Publications has produced a new collection of essays titled Science & Capital - Radical Essays on Science & Technology, with the intention to;

“bring together some of the more radical essays on science and technology written over the years - so as to highlight some of the dangers inherent in the blind trust we are often encouraged to place in science and scientific experts”.

As well as a new introduction, the book contains five essays; including “And Yet It Moves” by Boy Igor, a situationist influenced critique of science from 1986. Also included are extracts from a Paul Feyerabend talk on “How to Defend Society against Science".

The lengthy introduction by Phil Meyler, (aka Phil Mailer of "Portugal, the Impossible Revolution?”) has a critique of some of the perils of modern science, since its substitution of religion, and our often uncritical acceptance of “scientific experts”. It analyses the Sokal affair, a critique of post modernist ideas on science, as well as “junk science”, the internet and the spectacle of modern commodity technology.

Semprun's essay on Chernobyl deals with the media manipulation of public perceptions, using the mystification of scientific authority;

The Ukrainian disaster was followed by a veritable bacchanal of unreason wherein not a sober voice was to be heard. For more than a month, as the winds from Chernobyl continued to blow, power's experts, who in France regretted having upset us at first by saying nothing, now undertook to reassure us by saying anything at all. Flanked by their communications people, they put on a show that defied parody...
Indoctrination of this kind, so poorly disguised as information, always bears the clear marks of its origin. Uncontrollable statistics and unverifiable figures are solemnly trotted out, for all the world as though the whole of society consisted of docile civil servants; and incomprehensible acronyms - designating obscure but presumably powerful institutions - are pompously produced one after the other, like the litanies of a self-satisfied cleric who can be sure of awed respect from his audience.
"

Boy Igor’s “And Yet It Moves” is also situationist-influenced in its assessment of science as a spectacle of specialist hierarchical knowledge. It has a good history of science and makes many strong arguments against the scientific concepts of “scientific revolutions” a la Popper, Kuhn and Lakatos as well as a critique of Lysenko - the Soviet geneticist who was Stalin’s favourite scientist - and the scientistic ideals of Marxist Leninism.

Video Surveillance, CCTV cameras and ever-expanding Big Brother surveillance are attacked and analysed in an essay by the French 'Collective' group.

The recurring theme running through the essays is to critique claims for the supposed impartiality of science. Rather, these essays investigate science's role as an 'objective' authority in the service of class society. Science as an elitist technological innovator of commodity production and consumption is contrasted with the possibilities for a liberated scientific activity within new forms of social organisation. In the last (and oldest) essay, Bakunin's prescient and penetrating observations on the tensions between the authoritarian and potential libertarian uses of science still resonate from the 19th century to the present and are echoed through the other essays in this book;

"Science, as a moral entity existing outside of the universal social life and represented by a corporation of licensed savants, should be liquidated and widely diffused among the masses. Called upon to represent henceforth the collective consciousness of society, science must in a real sense become everybody’s property. In this way, without losing thereby anything of its universal character, of which it can never divest itself without ceasing to be science, and while continuing to concern itself with general causes, general conditions, and general relations of things and individuals, it will merge in fact with immediate and real life of all individuals."

This is a stimulating book that questions many dominant assumptions about the function of science and technology in capitalism.

Buy here; http://www.amazon.co.uk/Science-Capital-Radical-Essays-Technology/dp/0956724000

Comments

Noa Rodman

13 years 9 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Noa Rodman on February 18, 2011

On the Chernobyl accident, one 'bourgeois' mystification is that it was the result of the totalitarianism, crappy socialist economic system, etc. of the USSR. From the USSR's side, I read one account which blames the accident on sabotaged US microchips.
Anyway, the wikipedia entry is a captivating read, seriously. It appears the accident was caused by and large as a result of a safety exercise!

hirmic

13 years 9 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by hirmic on February 19, 2011

How is the blind trust in scientists any different than the blind trust in any other authority like doctor or a car mechanic. The scientist is a result of the devision of labour. The licensed savant is in principle not any different than a licensed lawyer or a licensed forklift driver. If it would take the same time to train a scientist than it takes to train a forklift driver all the hocus-pocus would be gone. Of course the academic title gives a scientist the impression s/he is something special and the PhD thesis overemphasis the role of the individual scientist. This is even worse in humanities, where collective character of research disappears completely. But the todays rank and file scientist has as much property in her/his product as a factory worker has property in the car s/he produces. To say science must be everyones property is not different from saying any social product must be everyones property. To say a scientist needs/has more creativity than any worker who is not reduced to a gearwheel is an illusion.

Comrade

10 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Comrade on April 29, 2014

Pdf Please