Symposium 7 Knowledge and Power
"Clashes of Knowledge" is the first volume in a book series called "Knowledge and Space" dealing with spatial disparities of knowledge and the impact of the spatial context on the production and application of knowledge. The contributions in this book explore the conflicts between various types of knowledge, especially between orthodox and heterodox knowledge systems, which range from religious fundamentalism to heresies within the scientific community itself. Does the traditional distinction between "belief" and "knowledge" still make sense? How is the difference between knowledge and belief understood in different cultural contexts? How have the religious-based knowledge systems been displaced in their hegemonic role by "scientific" knowledge? In which ways do the agents of hegemonic, orthodox knowledge interact with the representatives of deviating, heterodox knowledge? These and many other questions are addressed by scholars of geography, history of science, philosophy, psychology, religious studies, sociology, theology, etc. A number of articles describe how scientists attempt to systematically exclude implausible knowledge claims from their disciplines and how the boundaries of science are subject to historical change and to spatial and cultural contexts.
Knowledge systems can also clash at the level of the individual. Why do people often ignore information that contradicts their personal "knowledge"? Under what conditions are people prepared to give up firm beliefs and integrate new information that contradicts their prior knowledge? This book thus addresses many fields in the academy but also learned individuals who are interested in the often puzzling spatial and cultural disparities of knowledge and clashes of knowledge.
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„Clashes of Knowledge“ is the first volume in a book series called „Knowledge and Space“ dealing with spatial disparities of knowledge and the impact of the spatial context on the production and application of knowledge. The contributions in this book explore the conflicts between various types of knowledge, especially between orthodox and heterodox knowledge systems, which range from religious fundamentalism to heresies within the scientific community itself. Does the traditional distinction between „belief“ and „knowledge“ still make sense? How is the difference between knowledge and belief understood in different cultural contexts? How have the religious-based knowledge systems been displaced in their hegemonic role by „scientific“ knowledge? In which ways do the agents of hegemonic, orthodox knowledge interact with the representatives of deviating, heterodox knowledge?
Teilnehmende
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Barker, Eileen | Geography | How Do Modern European Societies Deal with New Religious Movements? |
Cialdini, Robert | Psychology | Turning Persuasion From an Art into a Science |
Collins, Harry | Sociology | Science and its Imitators |
Dawson, Lorne L. | Sociology | When Prophecy Fails and Faith Persists: A Theoretical and Empirical Overview |
Fyfe, Aileen | History | Science and Religion in Popular Publishing in Nineteenth-Century Britain |
Gieryn, Thomas | Sociology | Boundary-Work and Science |
Hanegraaff, Wouter | Religious Studies | Reason, Faith and Gnosis: Three Knowledge Systems and Their Struggle for Hegemony in the Course of European History |
Josephson, Brian | Physics | Unconventional Ideas in Science: Ready for the Nobel Prize Award, or Sent to the Hell of Heretics? Experiences in the Hall of Scientific Fame |
Pollack, Detlev | Sociology | A Religious Resurgence? The Restructuring of the Religious Field in Eastern Europe After the Collapse of Communism |
Rupke, Nicolaas | History | The Role of Alexander von Humboldt in the Emancipation of Science from Religion |
Seiwert, Hubert | Religious Studies | Conflict and Interchange Between Religious Orthodoxies and Heterodoxies in China |
Stenmark, Mikael | Philosophy | Scientism: Salvation in the Name of Science |
Stump, Roger W. | Geography | When Faiths Collide: the Case of Fundamentalism |
Welker, Michael | Theology | The Demarcation Problem of Knowledge and Faith: Questions and Answers of Theology |