FINALLY!
I get to read about nukes & shit this semester.
This is for the "Secrecy" portion of my science & tech studies class.
#PhDLifepic.twitter.com/tvlm8vtlp7
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.
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FINALLY!
I get to read about nukes & shit this semester.
This is for the "Secrecy" portion of my science & tech studies class.
#PhDLifepic.twitter.com/tvlm8vtlp7
Many of those others are good but the best overall article on science and secrecy is @michaelaaronden's one — it's just great.
The one in that volume or separate pub?
HOORAY! I am doubly excuted to read it then! First, Simmel.
I'm a historian so of course I think historians do this better but really they do it better. Simmel and Weber and pretty much anyone who
is a 19th century theorist of it, who doesn't look into specific historical conditions, ends up being kind of useless in my view.
The anthropologists (!!!) do a good job of this when they root it in specific institutions (Masco, Gusterson, etc.) and their histories.
But my first rule of "thinking smaaaht about secrecy" is seeing it as historically contextualized practice. And Dennis does so good at that.
(My second rule is throw the secrecy/openness dichotomy out the window. It doesn't clarify anything, it just produces empty talking points.)
I remember you writing or being quoted saying such year+ ago re: dichotomy & WWII roots of contemp US secrecy practices, stuck with me!
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