'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather scornful tone,' it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less.' Definitions are an important and useful part of making an argument. That said, as we have seen with other discussions on this list, they are inherently slippery. I'm wondering, at this point, what the point here is; why is it particularly important that we share an understanding of what science is? One of the streams of this discussion (I'll admit that I have not attended to all of the responses) has to do with whether AIR was an organization strictly of "scientists," and who counts as a scientist. I do think that there tends to be some feeling that the closer you fall to the natural sciences--biology, (empirical) physics, etc.--the more "scientific" you are. While some forms of qualitative research are certainly employed by people who tend to call themselves "social scientists" (e.g., interview, etc.), others generally are not (e.g., participant observation). As a practical matter, I suspect that many AIR members would not self-identify as "scientists." While I tend toward the social sciences, I'm ambivalent as to whether the work I do is "science." I do believe it is "research" and "scholarship." It includes informed (I hope!), though not necessarily replicable opinion and interpretation. It also includes making stuff: things that might be termed either "test aparatus" or "art" or "toys," depending on perspective. Many people who consider themselves scientists appreciate and value the work of other scholars, and many non-scientific researchers value and appreciate the work of scientists. The best of both are reflexive about their own process of understanding as well as others' approaches. This mutual respect the surest way to dismantle CP Snow's divide. I think the line between "internet anythings" and "internet scholars," is a questions of consensus, no more or less--an idea that should appeal to a particular brand of "scientist" among us. Alex Halavais Assistant Internet Anything Random Institute of Medium Education Anywhere On 10/18/06, Sam Tilden <tildensam@yahoo.com> wrote:
I am doing no such thing.
The term scientist was invented (a hypothetical construct) in 1833. Prior to that all scholars were "philosophers" and people who investigated physics, chemistry etc. were "natural philosophers". That is why the terminal degree is a doctorate of philosopy. People who write about and make discourse about a subject are fundamentally different than people who are practitioners of that subject. That is unless they use the methods of rigid scholarship to investigate the basic principles of the subject.
A scientist in the sense of this explanation can come from any discipline as long as the intent is to uncover basic understanding by an orderly process.
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