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2020, Media+Environment
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7 pages
1 file
In his 1959 Rede Lecture at Cambridge, scientist-turned-novelist C. P. Snow famously described a methodological and conceptual rift between literary intellectuals, on the one hand, and scientists, on the other ([1959] 1998). Snow ventured to classify humanists as past-facing, "natural Luddites" who are slow to change (22), while scientists, he explained, may seem shallowly optimistic to outsiders but in reality have "the future in their bones" (10). "Between the two," he noted, there lies "a gulf of mutual incomprehension." Given the "curious distorted image" they have of each other, Snow thought it difficult for them to find "much common ground" (4). On the fiftieth anniversary of Snow's lecture, in 2009, many an author was quick to proclaim that the rift had only widened, in part due to the growing ambit of scientific research and increasing specialization, and in part due to alarming reports of scientific illiteracy and skepticism among general citizens (Hartz and Chappell 1997; Winston 2009). It struck us, as coeditors of this stream of Media+Environment, that there was plenty of evidence against this "widening rift" hypothesis and that a focus on media might help to clarify where the bulk of the evidence falls. Efforts to bridge the "two cultures," whether through a "third culture" of some kind (Brockman 1995; Kluszczynski 2011) or through a transdisciplinary fusion-variously neologized as "artscience," "arts-science," "sci-art," or one or another form of humanities-science "consilience"-have arisen and (sometimes) dissipated over the years, but their general trajectory, we thought,
At least since C.P. Snow’s seminal Rede lecture The Two Cultures, the idea of a significant difference in kind between the natural sciences and the arts and humanities has been prevalent in Western culture. A gap has been perceived to exist not only in methodology and theory, but more fundamentally, in understandings and worldviews. This has resulted in a dichotomous debate both in academic and media discourses. As a reaction to this, and parallel in time, some actors have strived to achieve a ‘third culture’. This is a common attitude in the still emerging field of ‘artscience’, whose actors seek to combine the advantages and knowledges of the sciences with those of the arts and humanities. Researchers from every concerned field have contributed to the exploration of the interface between ‘art’ and ‘science’. However, I argue in this article that the very term artscience, in simply joining together the words ‘art’ and ’science’, is reenforcing an old notion of a binary opposition between these two fields. The idea of ‘two cultures’, still implied within the image of a ‘third culture’, disguises the plurality of perceptions and approaches within and across fields. While useful in pointing out lack of communication between fields, it tends to overemphasize divisions, ignore complexities, and, in some cases, leave out important parts of the picture. I suggest that the discourse of the ‘third culture’ and the term ‘artscience’ may jointly occlude the multiple possible constellations of practitioners, roles and approaches, and may be a potential limitation to interdisciplinary collaborations.
Journal of Arts , 2024
In contemporary society, a substantial divide exists between the realms of "Science" and "Humanities." The growing divide has reached a level where reading Shakespearean literature and comprehending the Third law of Thermodynamics are viewed as functions isolated within different cognitive areas leading to an epistemic void, transforming the interaction between a 'Scientist' and a 'Philosopher' into a state of radio silence. This paper intends to study C.P Snow's (1905-1980)-an English novelist and physical chemist-observations in the light of contemporary academic landscapes, as discussed in his essay "The Two Cultures" from the prominent work The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (1959), contending that such a divide remains a critical impediment to the holistic understanding of the world. To get a nuanced understanding of the chosen text, a reading of a few influential works such as The Third Culture (1999) by Gerald Feinberg and Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science and Humanism (2018) by Steven Pinker is undertaken. A comprehensive and detailed examination of "The Two Cultures", is conducted to emphasize the barriers between disciplines, specialisation silos, complexities in technological integration, ethical considerations, and the cultural impact of science. The paper proposes a paradigm shift in the discipline of humanities, arguing the necessity for scientific literacy while positing a fundamental reimagining of it, so it stays relevant for the coming generations. Thus, by fostering scientific fluency within the humanities and nurturing mutual respect and engagement, we can forge a richer intellectual ecosystem capable of solving the complex challenges of the 21st century/ age of artificial intelligence.
Journal of Literature and Science
When I was sixteen, my physics teacher told me that if I took literature and art for my final high school subjects, as I wanted to, rather than mathematics and science, I would "only ever be a housewife." The curriculum was designed to make it an either/or decision. I took science. I wonder how late-twentieth century Anglophone education might have been different if that convenient binary had not so easily been assimilated as self-evident. The distinction between the two cultures was based, proximately at least, not on differences in methods or objects of study but on amateur ethnography, comparing two groups: the scientists Snow worked with during the day with the literary colleagues he socialized with at night (Snow 2). This misalignment generated for Snow the observation that scientists (at work) and literary types (at play) were mutually unintelligible, and that the fault lay with what he considered a traditional conservative literati who were unwilling to adapt to the specialized scientific discourses he saw as the language of the future. A misconstrual of relative accessibility and difficulty resulted. In medical education, for example, a version of Snow's binary is sometimes defensively invoked to support the humanities in medicine: as well as its taken-forgranted science, there is what is called an art of medicine. Four years after C.P. Snow's Rede lecture, John Talbott, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, objected to the application of a similar dichotomy to clinical practice: "Common speech tries to distinguish between the 'artist' and the 'scientist.' There is a confused notion that one uses emotion and intuition,. .. achieving great effects without knowing how or why, but that the other, employing rational analysis, is cold and precise, analytical and detached, surrounded by highly complex instruments that baffle the lay mind" (142). Forty years later, JAMA's ethics journal reveals the distinction's longevity in a case about a medical student's concern that his lack of diagnostic and procedural experience keeps him from offering patients anything more than his "bedside manner" (Kirkpatrick 452). The case's title reduces this complex state to a simplistic dichotomy-"Putting it all together: The Art and Science of Medicine." This is reinforced in the commentary: "technical healing and the art of healing are two sides of the medical care coin" (Kirkpatrick 453). The technicaldoingis confused with the scientificknowingand both, being hard, are contrasted with art as an undefined practice inscrutably situated in the demeanour of the physician. The question "Is good bedside manner important if physicians can cure patients with their technical experience?" produces an implied "no": "there comes a time when science cannot stave off death or suffering,. .. but the practitioner of the art of healing always has something to offer. . ." (Kirkpatrick 453). To imagine medicine as cleanly divisible into two disciplines (or cultures), even if one imagines them as two sides of the same coin (a common move), is to exclude the very kind of thinking that might recognize and resolve some of the challenges facing health care. The art/science binary leaves no room for approaches to health care based, for example, in rigorous, historically-informed attention to the precise use of language, or in the recognition that the clinical care of a patient is at a second order of application, since pure science is appliedor translatedinto technologies of diagnosis and therapeutics, and these are then in turn applied to each
The FEBS journal, 2018
In 1959 the physicist and novelist C. P. Snow described a schism in Western society. He said that the Sciences and the Arts were, in effect, 'two cultures'. How does that appraisal look to us now? This article looks at a development Snow cannot have anticipated - the current academic orthodoxy of 'Critical Theory', and an associated mistrust of scientific knowledge ….
The publication of Edward Wilson’s Consilience over a decade ago (1998) led to renewed discussion about the relationship between the sciences, humanities, and fine arts. Particularly, how should science and art be defined, and their relationship understood? I propose that extending Willard Quine’s work on science, and theories of art proposed by Oscar Wilde, Jorge Luis Borges, Arthur Danto, Hans Belting, and Denis Dutton, can provide for a richer concept of consilience between science and art than that proposed by Wilson, suggesting important components for definitions of a scientific and artistic method, and how theories of science and art could be linked in the future. http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/philosophy_and_literature/v038/38.1A.lock.pdf
A. Allegra-F. F. Calemi-M. Moschini (a cura di), Alla fontana di Silöe, Orthotes, Napoli-Salerno, pp. 251-264, 2019
Humanities and the scientific image of man, today 1. From an epistemological point of view 1.1. From "two cultures" to "two images": Snow and Sellars About 60 years ago, Charles Percy Snow (1905-1980) famously analysed the relationship between the so called «two cultures»: that of «literary intellectuals», on the one hand, and that of «scientists, and as the most representative, the physical scientists», on the other. 1 Snow was extremely worried about the existence of «two polar groups», separated by «a gulf of mutual incomprehension -sometimes (particularly among the young) hostility and dislike, but most of all lack of understanding» and his concern mainly reflected his own personal history, because, as he himself declared: «by training I was a scientist: by vocation I was a writer». 2 While Snow's analysis was extremely successful and vivid in identifying a distinctive feature of our times, his explanation of it and his suggestions for overcoming the divide are widely regarded as somewhat unsatisfactory. I argue that one reason for this inadequacy is the fact that Snow's analysis essentially concentrates on sociological, historical and pedagogical factors, rather than on the epistemological ones. This produces a discourse which, while effectively (and ironically) describing some effects of the split at issue, leaves us, nevertheless, without much insight into his deep causes.
Conservation Science in Cultural Heritage, 2018
Science and its applications Science and its applications are an integral part of our life and the assumptions underlying it are inextricably linked to the way we conceive the world and the way we see ourselves as part of it. In a scientific context, method is fundamental, together with the contribution of those who determine procedures for the peer-review or double-blind evaluation of scientific articles, in order to arrive at a final objective and reliable judgment. But it is not only the method that establishes scientific objectivity, because simply looking at documentary sources is enough to realize that the scientific "method" has always been closely linked to the times, places, and evaluators who have exercised this practice case by case. This has meant that some historians, philologists and philosophers have reduced the history of science to simple news, to anecdotes chosen to support this or that theoretical model, depriving it of its ability to interpret, as well as to account for the past. The historical approach to the scientific task suggests a different answer, just as there is no single answer that can be attributed only to "science", there is none that can be attributed only to "history". In fact, until a few decades ago, scholars tended to present large, all-encompassing historical frescoes. This approach has recently changed due to the greater amount of information available to us and to the new ways of viewing the sources: we have started searching for science where we used not to look for it before and, what is more important, the questions that historians try to answer have changed to involve a wider segment of people. Hence, the intent is to present a science that has interacted across the centuries, through the culture and society of the time. Special attention is paid to the visual aspect of scientific culture. Getting to know the nature of a work of art, in fact, means being able to identify links, relationships and processes that were previously hidden. Emphasizing the visual aspect of science is also a way of remembering the material nature of scientific knowledge: science is not only in the minds of its creators or in the equations that translate it to paper, it is in the instruments of those who practice it every day and in the ways developed by researchers to establish relationships that are more solid.
2004
Practice must always be founded on sound theory.-Leonardo Da Vinci (Kleine, 1977, pp157-158) Artists working with computer and other technologies that are a product of the scientific world are also informed and inspired by the exciting innovations and discoveries taking place in science. We are keenly interested in what the cultural critics and commentators from the humanities have to say on the meaning and impact these discoveries and innovations have on culture and society. Scientists can relate and understand our work easier primarily because we use the same tools-computers. Because our work and tools are in constant flux, we are forced to articulate the reasoning and meaning informing the art produced, which has traditionally been the role of art critics and historians. This creates room for an active dialogue with both humanists and scientists. Thus we are placed in between these "Two Cultures," which creates a triangle and promises to an emergence of a Third Culture. This is a privileged and dangerous position, at least in this transitional stage. Therefore it is important to take a look at the background and current status of these Two Cultures. The Ghost of CP Snow persists Much of the discussion concerning the triangle of art, science, and technology can be traced back to CP Snow's famous annual Rede lecture at Cambridge on May 7th, 1959. The phrase 'Two Cultures' entered into a cultural controversy and debate that has endured remarkably long. The title of Lord Snow's lecture was "The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution." He identified the two cultures as the literary intellectuals and the natural sciences, and he pointed to the curricula of schools and universities as the source of the problem. In the Introduction to Snow's book, Stephan Collini gives a historical perspective to this divide by locating its beginning in the Romantic Period, at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries. (Snow, 1964, pg. xii) He traces the British genealogy of 'Two Cultures' anxiety in the linguistic peculiarity by which the term 'science' came to be used in a narrowed sense to refer to just the 'physical' or 'natural' sciences. The compilers of the Oxford English Dictionary recognised that this was a fairly recent development, with no example given before the 1860's: "We shall. .. use the word "science" in the sense which the Englishmen so commonly give it; as expressing physical and experimental science, to the exclusion of theological and metaphysical." (Snow, 1964 pg. xi) William Whewell, a philosopher and historian of science who used 'science' in his Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences of 1840, is credited with establishing this term. The first time it was recorded as an idea, however, was at the Association for the Advanced Science in the early 1830's when it was proposed as an analogy to the term 'artist.' Yet, the two cultures refer to the divide between the literary humanities and frequently exclude what was originally the analogy to science-art.
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World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2022
It is usually assumed that each discipline ranging from the humanities to the sciences forms a neat, separate and irreducible mode of analysis and area of expertise. The great body of knowledge accumulated over time, is a testimony to the many advances in each field. Often new fields and sub fields are established, but in the main there appears to be a separation between the humanities and the sciences; two cultures as it has often been described. While this is a useful partition, it may be but a fiction. For whether one is talking about either such disciplines, it remains human knowledge all the same and therefore subject to the same perceptual apparatus and history, albeit science claims neutrality and objectivity, while the humanities and the arts, the subjective and more imaginative domain. Nevertheless, such distinctions may be spurious and shortsighted. My endeavor is to suggest some rudimentary language, albeit far from a written system of codification or discipline, but desc...
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