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wellerstein's profile
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
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@wellerstein

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Alex WellersteinVerified account

@wellerstein

Historian of science, secrecy, and nuclear weapons. Professor of STS at @FollowStevens. UC Berkeley alum with a Harvard PhD. NUKEMAP creator. Coder and web dev.

Hoboken, NJ / NYC
blog.nuclearsecrecy.com
Joined September 2011

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    1. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 12 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @Hillbilly_Matt @ColdWarScience

      Agree - but the bridge doesn't make those decisions, humans do. I think there's separation between the bridge as physical object and the human activity/intentions around it. There's also a separation between scientific method and human activity/intentions around it.

      6 replies 0 retweets 9 likes
    2. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 12 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @MarkNagelberg @Hillbilly_Matt @ColdWarScience

      When humans make things, they imbue them with human properties, including politics. A nuclear weapon, you probably agree, contains some kind of inherent politics — or to put it another way, it's impossible to imagine one that doesn't come with political implications.

      4 replies 2 retweets 115 likes
    3. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 12 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein @MarkNagelberg and

      And the idea that you can separate the "scientific method" from "human activity." Science is a form of human activity. If you study science and scientists (which Audra and I and many others do), this becomes quite obvious — and what else could it honestly be?

      1 reply 3 retweets 71 likes
    4. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 12 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein @Hillbilly_Matt @ColdWarScience

      Yes but of course since is also a noun, not just a verb. I see separation because the scientific method is not just an activity, it's an idea. An idea can be separate from activities and intentions.

      2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
    5. Joseph Martin‏ @RandomJetship 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

      The sense in which a bridge is just a pile of concrete is meaningless. You can call it that, but you’re not talking about a bridge. It you want a bridge, you need to take the politics on board. Same for science. Ideas must be instantiated by actions or they’re meaningless too.

      2 replies 2 retweets 26 likes
    6. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @RandomJetship @wellerstein and

      All along I’ve agreed that the human activities around the bridge are political but callling the bridge itself political is what’s meaningless. It’s an inanimate object.

      2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
    7. Joseph Martin‏ @RandomJetship 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

      That move is what people are calling out. If you a) cut a bridge completely out of its context, and b) reduce it to materials, you can no longer say anything meaningful about that bridge qua bridge. Those political systems are part of what we all mean when we talk about bridges.

      3 replies 1 retweet 23 likes
    8. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @RandomJetship @wellerstein and

      I think you can still say something about it when it’s taken out of context. Imagine a bridge on Mars. Still has some sort of meaning although not much use.

      5 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
    9. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @MarkNagelberg @RandomJetship and

      I just want to push on one thing here: You can't really remove things from context. That's a key lesson from history. Context is the water that history swims in. It's always there, even if it changes.

      1 reply 6 retweets 39 likes
      Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 13 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @wellerstein @MarkNagelberg and

      "Technology" is essentially defined by having a context, is another way to think about it; it is defined by its alteration of context, a transformation. (This is essentially Heidegger's argument in "The Question Concerning Technology," which I find very useful.)

      5:56 AM - 13 Jul 2018
      • 3 Retweets
      • 18 Likes
      • PRINCE N. OTCHERE pretty darn upbeat about things Gen Z’er with Millenial Characteristics Sarah Roberts Rachel Fox monica Sarah N. Gatson Ilse 할짝
      2 replies 3 retweets 18 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @wellerstein @RandomJetship and

          Thinking / thought experiments allow us to remove things from context in our minds. That was the only purpose of my silly example, just trying to illustrate a point.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        3. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
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          Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

          I'd also just like to add that I'm arguing against the idea that if something is created by political forces then it must necessarily be political itself, indefinitely. For example, an idea may serve political purposes for a period, but it's not forever bound to those purposes.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        4. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

          Of course I agree with Dr. Wolfe's original statement "science has always been political" if she means politics exists in science. I mean, obviously that's true. However, if she means all science is inherently political, that's a much stronger claim and I just don't see it.

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        5. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 13 Jul 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

          I've enjoyed this discussion quite a bit and I appreciate you all taking the time to engage.

          2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
        6. Mark Nagelberg‏ @MarkNagelberg 14 Jul 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @MarkNagelberg @wellerstein and

          Just to be clear didn’t mean to cut off debate or get the last word here. Genuinely appreciate the argument against and would like to hear more if you think it’s worth your time.

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
        7. End of conversation
        1. too poor to contour‏ @chthulta 13 Jul 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @wellerstein @MarkNagelberg and

          For anyone interested in Heidegger’s arguments re. technology and politics, it’s worth also reading @ChristianFuchs_ https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/650 …

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
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