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Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields: Metaphors That Shape Embryos
 
 
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Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields: Metaphors That Shape Embryos [Paperback]

Donna Jeanne Haraway (Author), Scott Gilbert (Foreword)


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Book Description

155643474X 978-1556434747 February 12, 2004
Acclaimed theorist and social scientist Donna Jeanne Haraway uses the work of pioneering developmental biologists Ross G. Harrison, Joseph Needham, and Paul Weiss as a springboard for a discussion about a shift in developmental biology from a vitalism-mechanism framework to organicism. The book deftly interweaves Thomas Kuhn's concept of paradigm change into this wide-ranging analysis, emphasizing the role of model, analogy, and metaphor in the paradigm and arguing that any truly useful theoretical system in biology must have a central metaphor.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"This timely reprinting of Donna Haraway's Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields give cause for two audiences to rejoice. The first audience includes philosophers, cultural historians, semioticians, sociologists, and anthropologists. This group has been variously enlightened, entertained, and enlivened by Donna's analyses of our culture and her suggestions for alternative futures. Since Donna has been adamant that understanding the contextual nexus of origins is critical for understanding history and its outcomes, Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields should provide this group with insights into how Donna came into her present views. Indeed, I would contend that one of the most important precepts in her most recent pamphlet - namely that the relation is the smallest possible unit of analysis - can be traced directly to the embryological science analyzed in this 1976 volume. No matter what else Donna's philosophy might be - Marxist, feminist, affectionate, ironic, cyborgian, anthropocanine - it is thoroughly and uncompromisingly epigenetic."
- Scott F. Gilbert, from the Foreword

About the Author

Donna Haraway is perhaps our most advanced scientific storyteller. She locates the myths, metaphors, and tropes that underlie a technologically companionable physical world. Without abandoning scientific method—in fact, by embracing it in its fullest applicability—she exposes and also celebrates our scientific narratives as our clan story. In the process she 'outs' our most fundamental distinctions and unexamined paradoxes: nature/culture, wild/domesticated, molecular/organic, animal/human, body/gender, et al. Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields is the first chapter of Haraway's epic tale of Western science. When she names it 'metaphors that shape embryos,' it should be clear that embryos also shape her metaphors, for she brilliantly illuminates the origin and dependence of each in each other. Donna Haraway is a professor in the History of Consciousness Department, University of California, Santa Cruz.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: North Atlantic Books (February 12, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 155643474X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1556434747
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.6 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,208,954 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"If the history of science were a disinterested, purely descriptive account of objective operations performed to elucidate the workings of a nature no one believed in anymore, it would raise few passions." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nonvitalist organicism, neuroplasmic flow, organismic paradigm, basement lamella, crystal analogy, homologous response, sceptical biologist, equipotential system, protoplasmic structure, chemical embryology, morphogenetic hormone, amphibian gastrula, machine paradigm, anomalous viscosity, ventral ectoderm, organismic perspective, developmental mechanics, experimental concerns, organizing relations, primary shaft, limb field, machine analogy, mesenchyme cells, paradigm community, contact guidance
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Joseph Needham, Paul Weiss, Theoretical Biology Club, D'Arcy Thompson, Ross Harrison, Hans Spemann, World War, Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Jacques Loeb, Jane Oppenheimer, Joseph Woodger, Lloyd Morgan, Dorothy Wrinch, Hans Driesch, Claude Bernard, Ernst Haeckel, Jean Piaget, Johns Hopkins, Wilhelm Roux
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