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Laboratory Life - continued...
Laboratories
It is not surprising that Latour chose the laboratory. The success story of
the experimental life sciences, which finally turned them into the leading
scientific paradigm of our time, began a long century earlier, while the first
physiological laboratories were being constructed. The laboratory
offered a space where research
could proceed in a controlled and undisturbed manner, a highly artificial
environment, that has been crucial ever since for the emergence of experimental
sciences. "Every experimental science requires a laboratory", Claude
Bernard wrote in the 1860s. "There the man of science
withdraws, and by means of experimental analysis tries to understand phenomena
that he has observed in nature." (Bernard 1957, 140) The physiologists'
withdrawal from nature during the 19th century led from the domestic kitchen
table past the clinic's broom closet to the fully equipped experimentation site
in one of the newly-founded physiological institutes. It stands metonymically
for the emergence of an experimental life science, which, in Claude Bernard's
words, was all about "foreseeing and directing phenomena", in contrast to
disordered nature. Nature consisted of unforeseen incidents, noise, and romping
children, disturbing the scientist at his kitchen table. (Bernard 1957, 57)
Laboratories, much like mathematical formula, were, as Husserl would put it some
decades later, a way of retreating from the life-world.
Reference: Felsch, Philipp. 2003. Laboratory Life. How Physiologists Discovered their Everyday.. The Virtual Laboratory (ISSN 1866-4784), https://vlp.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/references?id=art12&page=p0003
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