Defenders of the Truth: The Sociobiology Debate

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Oxford University Press, 2000 - Psychology - 493 pages
For the last twenty-five years, sociobiologists have come under continuous attack by a group of left-wing academics, who have accused the former of dubious and politically dangerous science. Many have taken the critics' charges at face value. But have the critics been right? And what are their own motivations? This book strives to set the record straight. It shows that the criticism has typically been unfair. Still, it cannot be dismissed as 'purely politically motivated'. It turnsout that the critics and the sociobiologists live in different worlds of taken-for-granted scientific and moral convictions. The conflict over sociobiology is best interpreted as a drawn-out battle about the nature of 'good science' and the social responsibility of the scientist, while it touches on such grand themes as the unity of knowledge, the nature of man, and free will and determinism. The author has stepped right into the hornet's nest of claims and counterclaims, moral concerns, metaphysical beliefs, political convictions, strawmen, red herrings, and gossip, gossip, gossip. She listens to the protagonists - but also to their colleagues. She checks with 'arbiters'. She plays the devil's advocate. And everyone is eager to tell her the truth - as they see it. The picture that emerges is a different one from the standard view of the sociobiology debate as a politically motivated nature-nurture conflict. Instead, we are confronted with a world of scientific and moral long-term agendas, for which the sociobiology debate became a useful vehicle. Behind the often nasty attacks, however, were shared Enlightenment concerns for universal truth, morality and justice. The protagonists were all defenders of the truth - it was just that everyone's truth was different. Defenders of the Truth provides a fascinating insight into the world of science. It follows the sociobiology controversy as it erupted at Harvard in 1975 until today, both in the US and the UK. But the story goes more deeply, for instance in its account of the circumstances surrounding W.D. Hamilton's famous 1964 paper on inclusive fitness, and on the connections of the sociobiology debate to the Human Genome project and the Science Wars. General readers and academics alike will find much to savour in this book.

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About the author (2000)

Ullica Segerstrale is Associate Professor of Sociology at Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. Among her degrees are an M.S. in organic chemistry and biochemistry from the University of Helsinki, Finland, an M.A. in Communications from the University of Pennsylvania, and a Ph.D. in sociology from Harvard. She has taught at Smith College and Abo Akademi, Finland, and worked as a member of the international research group 'The Biological Foundations of Human Culture' at the Zentrum fur Interdisziplinare Forschung (ZiF) in Bielefeld. She has published widely on such topics as scientists' reasoning about 'good' and 'bad' science, error and fraud, and science and social values. She is also the coauthor of The Hard Program in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge. She is a Fulbright Fellow, a fellow of the Salzburg Seminar in American Studies, and the receipient of a Senior Researcher Grant from the Academy of Finalnd, Helsinki.

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