Program on Science, Technology and Society at HarvardKennedy School of GovernmentHarvard University |
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SCIENCE & DEMOCRACY LECTURE AND PANEL DISCUSSION
![]() Necessary Fictions: The Decline of Science in the Democratic ImaginationYaron EzrahiProfessor of Political Science, Hebrew University, JerusalemApril 9, 2007, 5:00pm-7:00pm Starr Auditorium, Belfer Building Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Yaron Ezrahi is a political science professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is the author of The Descent of Icarus: Science and the Transformation of Contemporary Democracy (Harvard, 1990) and Rubber Bullets: Power and Conscience in Modern Israel (Berkeley 1998). The subject of his forthcoming book is the crisis in the contemporary democratic imagination. ABSTRACT:My purpose in this talk is to examine the declining power of earlier imaginaries of science, nature and reality in sustaining modern democratic categories of civic agency, political participation, and conceptions of apolitical constraints. The change that concerns us is in the idea of popular sovereignty between early to late, or post-modern, democracy. Focusing on the role of fictions in modern political history, I ask what kinds of experience, how many facts, or how much publicly accessible evidence, are needed to lend such a fiction as popular sovereignty the status of believable reality. The historical record suggests that established political fictions are actually sustained by a very small number of "facts." What contributes most heavily to the believability of such fictions is the efficacy with which they match or sustain the normative-epistemological frame of a particular political world. I conclude with a brief examination of the decline of scientific or natural reality as components of post-modern political imaginaries of order, and the consequences of that decline for enacting popular sovereignty in our time.PANELISTS:Ellen GoodmanBoston Globe; Fellow, Shorenstein Center,Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Steven ShapinHistory of Science, Harvard UniversityJames McCarthyOrganismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard UniversityCass SunsteinChicago Law SchoolCo-sponsored by the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Harvard University Center for the Environment. A promotional poster for this talk is available here as a PDF file. UPDATE: This lecture was recorded and can be streamed over the web using RealPlayer with the following links: Part 1 (1:58:24), Part 2 (25:53). You are viewing a text-only version of this site because your browser does not support or has disabled support for Cascading Style Sheets. |
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