Fr. 230.40

The Orientation of Science and Technology - A Japanese View

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Shigeru Nakayama graduated from Hiroshima Higher School in 1948 (physical science major) and from the University of Tokyo in 1951 with an astrophysics major. He then went to the USA as a Fulbright Scholar and was awarded a Ph.D. in the history of science and learning (history of universities) at Harvard in 1959. During his graduate studies, he worked with Thomas Kuhn at Harvard in 1955-56. In 1957 he worked with Joseph Needham at Cambridge, and in 1958 continued his research at the Institute of Humanistic Science, Kyoto University. In 1960, he joined the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, remaining there until his retirement in 1989. He then moved to the School of International Business Administration, Kanagawa University, where he was Professor of the STS Centre until 2000. Following his retirement he was made Professor Emeritus at Kanagawa and continues to be active in both writing and teaching, becoming Visiting Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies on Science, Technology and Society in July 2002 and Visiting Professor at UCLA in September 2008. Klappentext Shigeru Nakayama has been at the forefront of redirecting conventional East Asian science and technology, arguing that 'orientation of science' refers not only to the direction of science but also implies a turning to Eastern science. Recently, he has been arguing for implementation of a 'Service Science', linked to rights and needs of mankind. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface; Foreword; Introduction; 1 The First Appearance of Aristotelian Cosmology in Japan! Kenkon Bensetsu; 2 On Introduction of the Heliocentric System into Japan; 3 Japanese Studies in the History of Astronomy; 4 Abhorrence of 'God' in the Introduction of Copernicanism into Japan; 5 Cyclic Variation of Astronomical Parameters and the Revival of Trepidation in Japan; 6 The Role Played by Universities in Scientific and Technological Development in Japan; 7 Diffusion of Copernicanism in Japan; 8 Grass-Roots Geology - Ijiri Shoji and the Chidanken; 9 Problems of the Professionalization of Science in Late-Nineteenth-Century Japan; 10 History of Science: A Subject for the Frustrated - Recent Japanese Experience; 11 Science and Technolgy in Modern Japanese Development; 12 Public Science in the Modernisation of Japan; 13 Japanese Scientific Thought; 14 The Future of Research - A Call for 'Service Science'; 15 The Transplantation of Modern Science to Japan; 16 The American Occupation and the Science Council of Japan; 17 Independence and Choice: Western Impacts on Japanese Higher Education; 18 Human Rights and the Structure of the Scientific Enterprise; 19 History of East Asian Science: Needs and Opportunities; 20 The Chinese 'Cyclic' View of History vs. Japanese 'Progress'; 21 The Ideogram versus the Phonogram in the Past! Present and Future; 22 Preface to 'A Social History of Science and Technology in Contemporary Japan'; 23 The Scientific Community Post-Defeat; 24 Overcoming the Digital Divide between Phonetic and Ideographic Languages; 25 Eighteenth-Century Science: Japan; 26 Technology in History: Japan; 27 Colonial Science: An Introduction; 28. Thomas Kuhn: A Historian's Personal Recollections; Bibliography; Index ...

Product details

Authors Nakayama, Shigeru Nakayama
Publisher University of hawaii press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.10.2008
 
EAN 9781905246724
ISBN 978-1-905246-72-4
No. of pages 288
Series Collected Papers of Twentieth-
Collected Papers of Twentieth-
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Natural sciences (general)

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