£115.60

Springer Expository Science: Forms and Functions of Popularisation: 9 (Sociology of the Sciences Yearbook, 9)

Price data updated today

View at Amazon

We'll watch every seller, every day. One email when your price arrives.

This is the most expensive it has ever been. Walk away.

£116 today · previous high £116 · all-time low £115

NEW HERE?

Amazon shows you one price. We show you all of them.

Tosheroon watches Amazon prices so you don't have to. Every product on Amazon has a price history — we make it visible. Set the price you'd actually pay, and we'll email you the second it gets there. No app, no account, one email.

WHAT'S ON THIS PAGE

↓ Price chart
when this has been cheap or pricey
↓ Forecast
where the price is heading next
↓ Statistics
all-time high & low, recent range
↑ Price alert
name your number, we'll email you

Price History & Forecast

Grey patches = out of stock. Cheaper = lower on the chart. Hover for exact prices.

Last 91 days • 91 data points

Historical
Generating forecast...
£115.60 £114.74 £114.93 £115.12 £115.30 £115.49 £115.68 24 February 2026 18 March 2026 10 April 2026 02 May 2026 25 May 2026

Price Distribution

Price distribution over 91 days • 2 price levels

Days at Price
Current Price
15 days 76 days · current 0 19 38 57 76 £115 £116 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common price: £116 (76 days, 83.5%)

Price range: £115 - £116

Price levels: 2 different prices over 91 days

Description

The prevailing view of scientific popularization, both within academic circles and beyond, affirms that its objectives and procedures are unrelated to tasks of cognitive development and that its pertinence is by and large restricted to the lay public. Consistent with this view, popularization is frequently portrayed as a logical and hence inescapable consequence of a culture dominated by science-based products and procedures and by a scientistic ideology. On another level, it is depicted as a quasi-political device for chan nelling the energies of the general public along predetermined paths; examples of this are the nineteenth-century Industrial Revolution and the U. S. -Soviet space race. Alternatively, scientific popularization is described as a carefully contrived plan which enables scientists or their spokesmen to allege that scientific learn ing is equitably shared by scientists and non-scientists alike. This manoeuvre is intended to weaken the claims of anti-scientific protesters that scientists monopolize knowledge as a means of sustaining their social privileges. Pop ularization is also sometimes presented as a psychological crutch. This, in an era of increasing scientific specialisation, permits the researchers involved to believe that by transcending the boundaries of their narrow fields, their endeavours assume a degree of general cognitive importance and even extra scientific relevance. Regardless of the particular thrust of these different analyses it is important to point out that all are predicated on the tacit presupposition that scientific popularization belongs essentially to the realm of non-science, or only concerns the periphery of scientific activity.

Product Specifications

Format
paperback
Domain
Amazon UK
Publication Date
30 June 1985
Listed Since
12 January 2007

Barcode

No barcode data available