如何用隐喻做事:把生活想象成大杂烩。

IF 3.1 Q1 Arts and Humanities Life Sciences, Society and Policy Pub Date : 2018-09-17 DOI:10.1186/s40504-018-0084-z
Matthew Kearnes, Declan Kuch, Angus Johnston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文介绍了社会科学家和一位化学家之间的合作,他们在合成生物学和纳米技术的交叉点上探索新疗法的发展前景。根据实验室的人种学研究和三位作者之间的讨论记录,我们质疑了Mackenzie(Futures 48:5-12 2013)在生命科学及其基础设施的图像学中所认定的递归关系的隐喻。特别关注基因编辑技术在合成生物学和生物纳米技术中的应用,我们将分析重点放在“进化生活大杂烩”的关键隐喻上,研究人员可以在实验室环境中进行DNA的“切割”以及工程颗粒与蛋白质的“粘附”和“结合”。总之,我们认为这些隐喻对于理解生命作为机器的隐喻和“工程生命”概念的流行是重要的。探索切割、靶向和生命作为一个进化大杂烩的概念预示着一个更偶然的工程和综合概念的方式,我们通过考虑对当代生命科学研究的民族方法论方法的解释意义来结束。
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How to do things with metaphors: engineering life as hodgepodge.

This paper presents a collaboration between social scientists and a chemist exploring the promises for new therapy development at the intersection between synthetic biology and nanotechnology. Drawing from ethnographic studies of laboratories and a recorded discussion between the three authors, we interrogate the metaphors that underpin what Mackenzie (Futures 48:5-12 2013) has identified as a recursive relationship in the iconography of the life sciences and its infrastructure. Focusing specifically on the use of gene editing techniques in synthetic biology and bio-nanotechnology, we focus our analysis on the key metaphors of 'evolutionary life as hodge-podge' within which 'cutting' of DNA and the 'sticking' and 'binding' of engineered particles to proteins can be performed by researchers in laboratory settings. Taken together, we argue that these metaphors are consequential for understanding metaphors of life-as-machine and the prevalence of notions of 'engineering life'. Exploring the ways in which notions of cutting, targeting and life as an evolutionary hodgepodge prefigure a more contingent notion of engineering and synthesis we close by considering the interpretive implications for ethnomethodological approaches to contemporary life science research.

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来源期刊
Life Sciences, Society and Policy
Life Sciences, Society and Policy Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: The purpose of Life Sciences, Society and Policy (LSSP) is to analyse social, ethical and legal dimensions of the most dynamic branches of life sciences and technologies, and to discuss ways to foster responsible innovation, sustainable development and user-driven social policies. LSSP provides an academic forum for engaged scholarship at the intersection of life sciences, philosophy, bioethics, science studies and policy research, and covers a broad area of inquiry both in emerging research areas such as genomics, bioinformatics, biophysics, molecular engineering, nanotechnology and synthetic biology, and in more applied fields such as translational medicine, food science, environmental science, climate studies, research on animals, sustainability, science education and others. The goal is to produce insights, tools and recommendations that are relevant not only for academic researchers and teachers, but also for civil society, policy makers and industry, as well as for professionals in education, health care and the media, thus contributing to better research practices, better policies, and a more sustainable global society.
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