Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison: Objectivity.
Kidd, Ian James
Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison
Objectivity.
New York: Zone Books 2007.
Pp. 501.
US$38.95 (cloth ISBN-13: 978-1-890951-87-8).
'Objectivity has a history, and it is full of surprises.'
So claim Daston and Galison in this original and important contribution
to the history and philosophy of science. They chart the emergence Emd
development of scientific objectivity from the eighteenth to the
twenty-first centuries by focusing upon scientific atlases--the standard
compendia of images used to train the scientific practitioners of each
generation. These atlases define the 'working objects' of
science and, through attentive historical analysis, one can see in them
the developing 'epistemic virtues' guiding scientific thought.
Daston and Galison argue that the ways in which scientists visually
conceived and presented the objects of their researches reflects their
implicit epistemological commitments. By examining scientific atlases,
one can identify the implicit epistemic virtues embedded within them and
the concepts of 'objectivity' they sustain. The interaction of
virtues and objectivities is then used to provide an innovative account
of the successive forms of the 'scientific self, the idealized
moral and epistemic character of the scientist.
Daston and Galison provide not only a history of the concept of
scientific objectivity but also new conceptual devices for understanding
it. Their focus on visual representations in the physical and life
sciences is original. Daston and Galison are concerned to identify the
'regulative visions of science' within which different modes
of scientific thought and practice operate (378). These 'regulative
visions' are not identified with top-down supra-theoretical
structures, like Kuhnian 'paradigms' or Foucauldian
'epistemes', but are instead invested in distinctive forms of
'scientific self. A scientific self is the particular normative
vision of the 'ideal' scientific inquirer as defined by
certain epistemic virtues. For instance, the Enlightenment scientific
self ob served, described, and classified, exercising virtues of
disciplined observation, as it sought to 'exclude the accidental
(and) eliminate the impure' (59). This self's aim was to
identify the fixed forms underlying phenomenal variation and diversity,
a process in which ontological and aesthetic judgments were essential.
By contrast, later 'mechanical objectivity' rejected such
judgments as unacceptable intrusions of subjectivity, hence its ideal
was 'purity of observation', in which scientific observation
and representation had to be 'policed' against the constant
threat of the intrusion of subjective prejudices (161).
Across these two cases, epistemic virtues shifted, creating a new
scientific self as an older one dissolved, whilst new conceptions of
objectivity appeared as a result. Daston and Galison treat three such
forms of objectivity: 'truth-to nature', 'mechanical
objectivity', and 'trained judgment'. This pluralization
of objectivity is itself radical enough, since by locating objectivity
in certain epistemic virtues, Daston and Galison demand that we reassess
its status as an automatic epistemic honorific, beginning with the
acknowledgement that there was 'nothing inevitable about the
emergence of objectivity' (197). Far from being a universal
epistemic value prized by scientists across the board, objectivity is
recast as a mutable concept, one which changes in response to evolving
epistemic virtues. These changes can be diagnosed, they suggest, by
examining both the scientific atlases themselves and the remarks made by
those who produced them, including scientists, illustrators, and
printers. The epistemic significance of modes of visual representation
also expands the scope of history of science, as 'objectivity'
is now a product as much of representational practices, technical
constraints, and divisions of artistic labour, as of epistemology,
experimentation, and empiricism.
An obvious criticism of this book is that it over-emphasizes the
significance of visual representations in the constitution of scientific
objectivity, one susceptible to criticisms of 'ocularcentrism'
made by recent historians of the senses. However, this is unfair. Daston
and Galison do not argue that the history of scientific objectivity is
determined solely by visual representation, but that modes of visual
representation are an obvious manifestation of the epistemic virtues
underlying scientific thought and practice. Their claim, both
methodological and epistemological, is that one can identify the
epistemic virtues underlying scientific practice by examining the visual
representations in which they manifest. 'Through each of these
atlas images', they argue, 'shimmers an image of an ideal
atlas maker' and, therein, 'a scientific self (363).
The constitution of a 'scientific self by a set of epistemic
virtues lies at the heart of Daston and Galison's history of
scientific objectivity. Unlike in previous philosophy of science
literature, objectivity is no longer solely an epistemological
phenomenon--one demanding value-neutrality, say--but also a normative
one, because consisting in a certain 'ethos'. Different
epistemic virtues promote different sorts of 'scientific self and,
with them, different conceptions of objectivity. This
'ethical' aspect explains the 'oddly moralizing
tone' of scientific atlas-makers' accounts of representations;
their 'admonitions, reproaches, and confessions' did not refer
simply to epistemic errors, such as the intrusion of aesthetic
judgments, but also reflected tangible moral failures: the patience,
diligence, and discipline necessary for scientific activity were both
epistemic and ethical virtues, and so 'objectivity' had
implications for an individual's scientific and moral integrity
(39).
This book provides a bold and original thesis, one which challenges
the ambitions of history and philosophy of science as much as our
understanding of scientific objectivity. The connections between
epistemic virtues, objectivity, and the scientific self are complex but
well established, supported by beautiful writing and illustrations, and
they introduce new areas of investigation for future scholars. It brings
together scientific biography, virtue epistemology, axiology, and the
history of scientific illustration, creating new connections between
ostensibly disparate areas, and the examples and discussions are
numerous and extended enough to sustain debate no matter the
particularities of one's historical and philosophical interests.
Whether Daston and Galison's history of objectivity is supported by
more specialized studies into particular disciplines is a matter for
future scholarship, as is the applicability of their thesis to
contemporary scientific practice. However, these points reflect the
richness of their claims, rather than any weakness, and their work is
sure to enrich history and philosophy of science for many years to come.
Ian James Kidd
Durham University