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Technoscience, imagined publics and public imaginations.

Kjetil Rommetveit1, Brian Wynne2

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Technoscientific innovation increasingly shapes public meaning and policy, replacing traditional discourse. This study examines how science, imagination, and publics co-produce societal understanding and action.

Keywords:
John Deweyco-productionimaginationlegitimationobstacle modelontologypublicstechnoscience

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Area of Science:

  • Sociology of Science and Technology
  • Science and Technology Studies (STS)
  • Public Understanding of Science

Background:

  • Recent years show increased entanglement of technoscientific innovation with societal and public spheres.
  • A decline in purifying discourses of natural and human agency is observed, as noted by Latour (1993).
  • Technoscientific visions of the 'imagined-possible' are increasingly central to public meanings and policy-making.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the forms of legitimation provided by technoscience.
  • To analyze how technoscience articulates public matters.
  • To explore the mutual co-production of imagination, publics, and technoscience over time.

Main Methods:

  • Revisiting historical and contemporary theories of imagination and science.
  • Analyzing the joint focus on imagination, publics, and technoscience.
  • Examining recent reconfigurations of technosciences and their imagined publics.

Main Results:

  • Technoscientific visions are replacing traditional discursive purifications in shaping public meanings.
  • Public issues are increasingly constituted by social actors as active imagination-exercising agents.
  • The co-production of technoscience, imagination, and publics is a key dynamic in contemporary society.

Conclusions:

  • Understanding the legitimation strategies of technoscience is crucial for public policy.
  • The interplay between imagination, publics, and technoscience shapes societal development.
  • Social actors actively engage with technoscientific possibilities to constitute public issues.