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Newsletter of the National Committee for History and Philosophy of Science鈥擮ctober 2022

Newsletter of the National Committee for History and Philosophy of Science

The Newsletter of the National Committee for History and Philosophy of Science (NCHPS) highlights news, opportunities and events relevant to the diverse fields of interest that occupy the discipline of history and philosophy of science.

In this newsletter

Foreword from the guest editor

Daniela K. Helbig, School of History and Philosophy of Science, The University of Sydney

Welcome to the latest instalment of HPS news from across Australia.

There are plenty of events and opportunities to report on: at conferences, exhibitions at the State Library of Victoria, and Radio National鈥檚 History Listen, HPS scholars have been discussing topics that range from crafting the universe to technological enhancements of the human brain, from botanists鈥 note-taking practices to the commercialisation of Indigenous intellectual property.

The AusSTS Graduate Workshop in July brought together emerging and established STS scholars for a series of events across multiple sites. Have a look at Timothy Neale鈥檚 Community Showcase for more details.

My reflections on 鈥楤ig Questions鈥 for our field build on Cordelia Fine鈥檚 column in the June 2022 newsletter, asking what the post-Covid future might entail for Australian universities. It鈥檚 a big question indeed, and my contribution in this issue singles out digital teaching technologies as partly a legacy of the pandemic, and as a legacy that raises urgent question for historians and philosophers of science and technology.

 

Big questions: What tools for the tertiary teaching trade?

Daniela K. Helbig

Walking across campus, a colleague of mine recently overheard an encounter at the University of Sydney. On a crowded footbridge, a student squeezed past a group of others and caught one individual鈥檚 voice. Almost in disbelief, he turned back to ask, 鈥淲ait---Ben? Are you鈥 Ben?!鈥 An equally perplexed Ben responded: 鈥淒an?? You must be Dan! I can tell from your voice!鈥 On Zoom, they had never turned their cameras on, and this accidental encounter was the very first meeting in person between two classmates. My colleague eventually went her own way, leaving Ben and Dan engaged in excited conversation.

Moments like this are among the more charming quirks brought about by the teaching technologies that were implemented rapidly during the pandemic, and with plenty of goodwill and effort on behalf of university staff and students. These technologies provided a way to make do. But now that most public health measures have been dropped across Australia and the country鈥檚 borders have reopened, they pose 鈥榖ig questions鈥 indeed for those attuned to thinking about the social implications of, and conditions for, technological change. Social distancing dots on park benches have largely been removed, but the teaching infrastructure put in place during the pandemic lives on under the myth of 鈥榟ybridity鈥: the alleged equivalence of in-person and digitally mediated teaching.

 Social distancing stickers on a bench on Fisher Road, The University of Sydney.

Convenient as this myth is for the purpose of continuing to rely largely on overseas student fees to fund the Australian university sector, it glosses over other serious problems too. Increased workload is just one of them. Casual teaching staff have borne the brunt of it, and it is no coincidence that the long-standing demand for 鈥榮afeguarding the teaching鈥搑esearch nexus鈥 is high on the priority list for the NTEU鈥檚 current enterprise bargaining process at Sydney University.

But beyond workload distribution, we need to reflect on the values imparted through the teaching process 鈥 values that are contested, and that will differ between individuals and institutions. Teaching technologies, like any other, configure social relations between all participants in the process, like Sydney University students Ben and Dan. Can the ongoing reliance on recordings and digital communication tools create a shared sense of critical engagement, personal accountability and mutual respect? Or does it help stabilise an understanding of students as customers that, unsurprisingly, feeds into the flourishing market for 鈥榗ontract cheating鈥 that has made newspaper headlines across the political spectrum in Australia in recent years?

Posing these questions is not to romanticise a pre-digital past, but to point to the need to be more imaginative, and clearer about the purpose of the tools we use in our trade. To examine the impact of digital technologies developed in and adopted from commercial contexts on the forms and contents of our teaching and research is very much a question for historians and philosophers of science and technology. These are problems that inform our weekly teaching meetings with my brilliant tutors. To them, the question is alive whether the university environment we鈥檙e shaping now is one in which they would like to have research and teaching careers.

 

Join the conversation

News

The Committee was saddened recently to learn of the passing of Australian archaeologist and National Museum Senior Research Fellow , who was a well-known leader of his field and mentor of young researchers. The 精东视频, through the Committee, partners with the National Museum of Australia to award the Mike Smith Student Prize every second year to reward and recognise the work of students in the history of 精东视频 or Australian environmental history. In September, the Academy announced Jessica Urwin and Margaret Williams as the 2021鈥22 joint winners of the Mike Smith Student Prize for their insightful essays.

In other news:

  • Carina Truyts (Deakin) introduces Anne Pollock鈥檚 keynote at the Melbourne node of the
  • the State Library of Victoria rare book expert shows illustration of heliocentric universe in 1566 edition of (On the revolutions of celestial spheres)
  • on 16 August 2022 and is now available as a podcast.
  • the Global Young Academy launches its report, in an online event
  • Swinburne University of Technology is launching the latest edition of the on 24 November.
  • The writer and activist Mike Davis, whose to a generation of writers and historians, has passed away aged 76.
Jessica Urwin (left) and Margaret Williams are joint winners of the 2021鈥22 Mike Smith Student Prize. Images supplied.

New books, papers and works

 
  • , edited by Timothy Neale, Courtney Addison and Thao Phan is being published by University of Toronto Press in October. Part of UTP鈥檚 Technoscience and Society series, the book provides a contemporary rethinking of Dmitri Mendeleev鈥檚 periodic table of elements, bringing together 鈥榚lemental鈥 stories to reflect on everyday life in the Anthropocene. 鈥淭his book is a wonderful methodological and political achievement that sparks the imagination, ignites new connections, and keeps the fire of political commitments alive.鈥 (Andrea Ballestero, University of Southern California). Preorder the book from UTP today.
  • is the journal of the 精东视频 and records the history of science, pure and applied, in Australia, New Zealand and the Southwest Pacific. The journal publishes peer-reviewed original scholarly research and historical documents, as well as reviews, biographical memoirs, book reviews, and an annual bibliography of the history of science in the region. It is published in January and July each year, with some articles published online early.
  • October 2022 volume contains:
    • .
  • . Brett Mason reveals how childhood friends from Adelaide 鈥 physicist Mark Oliphant and medical researcher Howard Florey 鈥 initiated the most significant scientific and industrial projects of the Second World War: manufacturing penicillin, developing microwave radar and building the atomic bomb.

 

Events and opportunities

Handmade Universe: from Craft to Code and the Spaces between

Date: Ongoing throughout 2022, recorded
Venue: State Library of Victoria

Exhibition at the State Library of Victoria. Handmade Universe celebrates the rewards of making and the limitless scope it offers for invention and enquiry.

Science at the Shine Dome 2022

Date: 22 November 鈥 24 November
Venue: Shine Dome and Parliament House

More about this event

Science at the Shine Dome is the Academy鈥檚 annual flagship event. Across three days, Australia鈥檚 most influential scientists gather at the Shine Dome in Canberra to celebrate and honour outstanding achievements in science. It is a time for researchers from all disciplines and career levels to come together to present, share, network and collaborate.

Opportunities

Find out about opportunities for scientists in the latest Academy Newsletter.

 

News from the Academy

Ian Potter House, the headquarters of the 精东视频, was officially reopened 989 days after it was extensively damaged during Canberra鈥檚 2020 hailstorm.

Academy President Professor Chennupati Jagadish and Ngunnawal Elder Aunty Violet Sheridan cut the ribbon during the re-opening ceremony.

鈥淲e hope to have created a beautiful, inspiring, accessible and sustainable home for the 精东视频, its Fellows and staff,鈥 Professor Jagadish said in his opening address.

Academy of Science Chief Executive, Anna-Maria Arabia, welcomed back Fellows and staff and thanked them for their patience and resilience over this disruptive period.

鈥淚 am incredibly proud that we have been able to refurbish Ian Potter House, and to restore a building that holds a special place in Australia鈥檚 history and that will contribute to our future,鈥 Ms Arabia said.

Read more about the reopening

 

Community showcase: AusSTS graduate workshop

Timothy Neale

The fourth annual occurred on the 28 and 29 of July. I was delighted to participate and lend a hand in what has become a key yearly Science and Technology Studies (STS) gathering, and this year鈥檚 theme of 鈥楪eneration鈥 spoke not only to STS understandings of knowledge and ideas as always unfinished and multiple, but also the workshop鈥檚 aim of connecting emerging and established STS scholars.

As last year, the workshop involved several simultaneous nodes in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand, with shared keynote lectures and in-person panels and fieldtrips in Melbourne, Sydney, Darwin and Wellington. This year, it was preceded by a workshop on publishing in the field, led by Kari Lancaster, Courtney Addison, Matthew Kearnes and myself (), Sujatha Raman () and Rachel Ankeny ().

In Melbourne, we then hosted Professor Anne Pollock from Kings College London who delivered a keynote lecture about feminist, anticolonial, and decolonial trends in the field. Professor Pollock began with insights from Ruha Benjamin鈥檚 forthcoming that there is much to be gained from moving beyond critique and thinking of 鈥渨hat we want to grow鈥. She also spoke of her excellent new book and why she chose to write a critical book about race that, rather than starting in the colonial past, instead works to engage contemporary readers through contemporary examples. After Professor Pollock鈥檚 keynote, we were treated to a range of research presentations by PhD students and early career scholars.

Day two began with an 鈥榠ntergenerational鈥 panel beamed from Wellington 鈥 featuring Hana Burgess (University of Auckland), Mythily Meher (University of Auckland), and Billy van Uitregt (Victoria University of Wellington) 鈥 and was rounded off with field trips to the State Library of Victoria and Melbourne Museum. It was another great year for the workshop and, having participated in all four, I am really excited for what鈥檚 next for this trans-Tasman community, as it continues to flourish and grow.

Stay tuned to , because there are already whispers about next year鈥檚 workshop!

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