1st Edition

Science and Scientification in South Asia and Europe

Edited By Axel Michaels, Christoph Wulf Copyright 2020
    292 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    292 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    292 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    This volume critically examines the role of science in the humanities and social sciences. It studies how cultures and societies in South Asia and Europe underwent a transformation with the adoption or adaptation of scientific methods, turning ancient cultural processes and phenomena into an enhanced scientific structure.



    The chapters in this book  







    • Discuss the development of science as a method in modern and historical contexts and the differences between modern science, scientification and pseudoscience.










    • Study the interactions between bodies of knowledge such as Sanskrit and computer science; mathematics and Vedic mathematics; science and philosophy. 


    Drawing on textual material, extensive fieldwork and in-depth interviews, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of philosophy, Indology, history, linguistics, history and philosophy of science and social science.

    Part I: Scientification and Scientism in India   Introduction to Part I  1. The Art of Grammar in Context: ‘Science’, Human Interest, and the Construction of Cultural and Political Worlds  2. Sanskrit and Computer Science  3. Mathematics and Vedic Mathematics  4.The Birth of the (Exorcism) Clinic: Media, Modernity, and the Jinn  5. The Science Question in Alternative Agricultures: Zero Budget Natural Farming and the Emergence of Agronomical Pluralism in India  6. Counting Food? The Pitfalls of Caloric Conception of Nutrition and Alternative Theories of Food  7. Thinking About Agriculture in an Industrialising Economy: An Essay   Part II: Philosophical and Anthropological Foundations in the European History of Science   Introduction to Part II: Philosophy, Anthropology and History of the Humanities  8. The Dominance of Scientific Knowledge and the Devaluation of Other Forms of Knowledge  9. Modernity, Colonialism and the "Science of Language"  10. Scientism of Early Modern Age and the Prevailing Scholastic Discourse on principium individuationis  11. Prolegomenon to the Study of Science and Religion. A Philosophical and Historical Reflection  12. Technoscientific Knowledge versus Deep Knowledge  13. Science Cannot Do It Alone: Habits, Environment, and the Enchantment of Beauty  14. Knowledge and Science in the Art of Living  15. Transforming Knowledge into Cognitive Basis of Policies: A Cosmopolitan from Below Approach  16. The Limits of Science from the Standpoint of Philosophy





     

    Biography

    Axel Michaels is Senior Professor of Classical Indology at the South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg, Germany. Since 2006, he is Vice President of the Heidelberg Academy of Science and head of the project ‘Religious and Legal Documents of Pre-modern Nepal’. His research interests include social history and history of Hinduism, theory of rituals, life cycle rites of passage in Nepal as well as the cultural and legal history of Nepal. He is the author of Homo ritualis. Hindu Rituals and its Significance for Ritual Theory (2016); Hinduism. Past and Present (2004); Śiva in Trouble. Rituals and Festivals at the Paśupatinātha temple of Deopatan, Nepal (2008); and Kultur und Geschichte Nepals (2018).





     



    Christoph Wulf is Professor of Anthropology and Education at the Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. He is also a member of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Historical Anthropology, the Collaborative Research Centre (SFB, 1999-2012), and the Graduate School ‘InterArts’ at the Freie Universität Berlin. His books have been translated into 20 languages. He is Vice-President of the German Commission for UNESCO. His research interests include historical and cultural anthropology, educational anthropology, rituals, gestures, imagination, intercultural communication and aesthetics. He has authored and edited various books including (with G. Gebauer) Mimesis: Culture, Art, Society (1995); Anthropology. A Continental Perspective (2013); Human Beings and their Images. Imagination, Mimesis, Imaginary (German edition 2014; English edition in preparation); Exploring Alterity in a Globalized World (2016); (with J. R. Resina) Repetition, Recurrence, Returns: How Cultural Renewal works (2019); and Bildung als Wissen vom Menschen im Anthropozän (2020; English edition in preparation).