Communicating Biological Sciences: Ethical and Metaphorical Dimensions
暂无分享,去创建一个
Contents: Preface Communicating biological sciences an introduction, Brigitte Nerlich, Richard Elliott and Brendon Larson Part I Setting the Scene: Issues of Hype, Hubris and Humility in Science Communication and Citizen Participation: How journalism can hide the truth about science, Elmien Wolvaardt Technologies of humility: citizen participation in governing science, Sheila Jasanoff. Part II Science Communication, Ethics and Framing: Models and Cultural Reality: The ethics of framing science, Matthew C. Nisbet Bioethical decisions and the public sphere: a cross-cultural perspective, Christoph Rehmann-Sutter Journalism and society, Toby Murcott Science communication and ethics a " trying to get it right: the Science Media Centre a " a case study, Fiona Fox. Part III Science Communication, Metaphors and Practical Realities: Genes, genomes and what to make of them, Jon Turney A workbench view of science communication and metaphor, Tim Radford Metaphor contests and contested metaphors: from webs spinning spiders to barcodes on DNA, Stephen Strauss. Part IV Science, Science Communication and Metaphor Analysis: Should scientists advocate? The case of promotional metaphors in environmental science, Brendon Larson Metaphors as time capsules: their use in biological sciences and the media, Iina Hellsten Breakthroughs and disasters: the (ethical) use of future-oriented metaphors in science communication, Brigitte Nerlich Craig Venter and the re-programming of life: how metaphors shape and perform ethical discourses in the media presentation of synthetic biology, Andrew Balmer and Camille Herreman Epilogue: Blame Francis Bacon: the metaphor of progress and the progress of metaphor in science, Megan Allyse Index.