ABSTRACT

This series includes monographs in the philosophy, sociology, and history of science and technology. “Science” and “technology” are taken in the broad sense: the former as including mathematics and the natural and social sciences, and the latter the social technologies or policy sciences. It is hoped that this series will help raise the level of the current debate on science and technology, by sticking to the standards of rationality and the concern for empirical tests that are being challenged by the current Counter-Enlightenment wave.