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A Changing Climate for Science

Autor Sophie C. Lewis
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 mai 2017
This book offers a critical exploration of first-hand experiences of practicing climate science. It tackles the pivotal question of what, precisely, constitutes contemporary scientific practice. The author offers an insider’s account of the experience of undertaking scientific training and of practicing as a climate scientist in order to examine the gulf between the way that science is perceived and pursued. Lewis delves into this discrepancy, drawing on personal experiences, recent scientific studies, extreme climatic events and political controversies. The book begins by considering the relevance of key concepts such as knowability, credibility, authority and objectivity to the practice of climate science. The following chapters argue that these concepts alone are limiting to our critical understanding climate science and climate change. The book then proposes a new view of scientific practice appropriate for diverse disciplines by arguing that concepts such as transparency and curiosity are equally important to scientific practice as the more familiar key concepts introduced at the start of the book. This book will appeal to climate scientists, social scientists and those interested in the challenges posed by future climate change.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319542645
ISBN-10: 3319542648
Pagini: 157
Ilustrații: XIII, 157 p. 5 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2017
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1. The want of any name.- Chapter 2. Neither necessary nor sufficient.- Chapter 3. The pseudo in our science.- Chapter 4. A tribe of scientists.- Chapter 5. The nature peepers.- Chapter 6. Into the hinterland.- Chapter 7. Blue skies and other shades.- Chapter 8. An invitation to the challenge.

Notă biografică

Sophie C. Lewis is a Senior Lecturer in the Fenner School of Environment and Society at The Australian National University (ANU), Australia. She is an investigator in the Centre of Excellence for Climate Systems Science and has published on past, present and future climate change and variability. 

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book offers a critical exploration of first-hand experiences of practicing climate scientists. It tackles the pivotal question of what, precisely, constitutes contemporary scientific practice. The author offers an insider’s account of the experience of undertaking scientific training and of practicing as a climate scientist in order to examine the gulf between the way that science is perceived and pursued. Lewis delves into this discrepancy, drawing on personal experiences, recent scientific studies, extreme climatic events and political controversies. The book begins by considering the relevance of key concepts such as knowability, credibility, authority and objectivity to the practice of climate science. The following chapters argue that these concepts alone are limiting to our critical understanding climate science and climate change. The book then proposes a new view of scientific practice appropriate for diverse disciplines by arguing that concepts such as transparency andcuriosity are equally important to scientific practice as the more familiar key concepts introduced at the start of the book. This book will appeal to climate scientists, social scientists and those interested in the challenges posed by future climate change.
Sophie C. Lewis is a Senior Lecturer in the Fenner School of Environment and Society at The Australian National University (ANU), Australia. She is an investigator in the Centre of Excellence for Climate Systems Science and has published on past, present and future climate change and variability. 

Caracteristici

Offers a critical examination of how climate science is communicated to the social and physical sciences Presents a description and assessment of climate science from an insider perspective Provides a first-hand account of aspects of working as a climate scientist Argues that climate science in particular presents us with a unique opportunity to acknowledge and address the gulf between public perception and scientific practice