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The Impact of Science Studies on Political Philosophy Author(s): Bruno Latour Source: Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol. 16, No. 1 (Winter, 1991), pp. 3-19 Published by: Sage Publications, Inc. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/690037 Accessed: 17/10/2008 12:30 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=sage. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1995 to build trusted digital archives for scholarship. We work with the scholarly community to preserve their work and the materials they rely upon, and to build a common research platform that promotes the discovery and use of these resources. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Sage Publications, Inc. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Science, Technology, & Human Values. http://www.jstor.org The Impact of Science Studies on PoliticalPhilosophy Bruno Latour Ecoles des Mines de Paris The developmentof science studies has an importantmessagefor political theory.This message has notyet beenfully articulated.It seems that the science studiesfield is often consideredas the extensionof politics to science. In reality,case studies show that it is a redefinitionof politics that we are witnessing in the laboratories. To the political representatives(elected by humans) should be added the scientific representatives (spokespersonsof nonhumans).Thanksto a book by StevenShapinand SimonSchaffer, it is possible to reconstructthe origin of this divide betweenthe two sets of representatives.A definitionof modernismis offered.Thenthe article explainshow to interpretthe shift to "nonmodernism,"that is, a historicalperiod when the two branchesof politics get togetheragain. What ties us all together?What is the cement, the glue, that makes us a group?Why is therea society insteadof a disorderlymob? Conversely,why are we all not tied together?Why do there appearto be disorderlymobs, crowds, and masses? How is it that the same social links may weaken, strengthen,or disappearaltogether,as we shift from the village to the city, from parish to marketforces, from nation-stateto multinational?How can society be made more coherent, more organic, or, on the contrary,more contradictory,less consensual?How can society be improved?In brief,what is the natureand functionof the social link?Whatare the historicaltransformationsof social links? Can social links be modified so thathumansociety becomes better? Such are the broadtypes of questionscoming underthe loose headingof social theory and political philosophy that I want to addressin memory of AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is the Second Mullins Memorial Lecture, delivered at Virginia Polytechnic Instituteand State University, March 1990. I thankmy colleagues at the History and Philosophy of Science Departmentin Melbournefor attractingmy attentionto the links between science studies and political philosophy.I thankSusan Cozzens for careful editing of my careless English. & HumanValues,Vol.16No. 1, Winter1991 3-19 Science,Technology, ? 1991SagePublications, Inc. 3 4 Science, Technology, & HumanValues ProfessorMullins's lasting impact on science studies. I want to show that science andtechnology studies,which ProfessorMullinsinitiatedin part,are notjust an additionto the social sciences but arebecomingtheircenterpiece. Moreexactly,they arethe meltingpot intowhich the social sciences areabout to be thrown-and rejuvenated. Importantquestions of political philosophy have been raised, by social reformers,by social historians, and more explicitly by sociologists and economists.They are also raisedagain and againby the people who observe social changes-and therearemany of them:pollsters,politicians,businessmen, strategists,columnists,cartoonists. The people who raise these questions have something in common.They feel they are far removed from other questions,raised this time by natural scientists, questions such as: Does the evolution of the universe fit the steady-statemodel or the inflationarymodel better?What is the numberof neutrinos coming from the sun? Is there a fifth force tying together the elementarycomponentsof matter?Into how many smallerunitsmay gluons be brokendown?Whatis the influenceof cytoplasmicinheritancecompared to thatof the gene? Of course, thereare also borderlinequestionsthatpertainsimultaneously to the domainof the social and to the domainof naturalsciences: - Questions of medicine: for instance, how is it that the life-style of some Americanstriggersdiabetes? - Questionsof bioethics (the word itself indicateswell enough the fusion of two differentissues):arewe authorizedto do with humanembryoswhatwe do with cow embryos,thatis, freeze them, implantthem, manipulatethem? - Questionsof ideology: is aggressionamong males rootedin primatesociety in chimpanzeesas much as in humans?This questionis clearlymixed, pertaining as much to the ethologist'sbiases as to apes or monkeys. - Questions that are clearly technical and political imbroglios:What is a safe level of radiationfrom nucleartests in the Nevada desert?Whatis the amount of carbondioxide an industrymay be allowed to release safely in the atmosphere?What is the amountof anthropogenicheat-another hybridnamethatwe can add safely to the naturallyoccurringamount? The list goes on and on. The numberof such mixed questionsis enormous; and in fact, I arguelaterthat they are infinite, and I explain why this is so. But what I want to stress now is this: in spite of the vast number of borderlinecases, so far, political philosophy itself has not reconsideredthe boundarybetween the social and naturalsciences. There is, social theory insists, a real, useful, and importantdifferencebetween those who deal with the humanand those who deal with the nonhuman.The newspapersmay be Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 5 filled with counterexampleshappilyconflatingtechnical,scientific, ethical, and political issues, ranging from the rain forest to the ozone layer hole gaping over the Antarctic;but this is not a reason, sociologists argue, to abandon the dichotomy between society and nature. Some, like Jurgen Habermas,devote most of their efforts to making this dichotomy stronger, not weaker. Before destroyingto the groundthis assertionthatis paralyzingall efforts at understandingand modifying our world, it is fair to recognize why it has become so entrenched in the professional ethos of social theorists and political philosophers.Originally,they had a good reason for maintaining this dichotomy: it was a way of defending themselves, in the nineteenth century,againstthe arrogant,triumphant,andreductionistbelief in positivist scientific method. If departmentsof history, sociology, literature,and art wanted to survive against the growing departmentsof chemistry,physics, andbiology, they hadto safeguardtheirbordersagainstinvasions.The human was their realm. "To you Nature,but to us Culture!"was their battle cry. Kant'sessay, the Conflictsof Faculties, was a post on just such a border;and Habermas'snew jurisdiction is yet another,more contemporaryeffort at securingGermanhumanitiesdepartmentsagainstthe dangerousinfluenceof the others. Once protectedby this fortifiedborder,they thenhad a choice. They could try to imitate and emulatethe naturalsciences (by developing hardmethodologies, statistics,surveys, computers,jargons);but this solutioncarriedthe danger that other scientists could scrutinize these methods that resemble theirs and make fun of them. Or they could develop soft methodologies completely,proudly,andexplicitly at variancewith the naturalsciences. This is where what is called the hermeneuticenteredthe picture. The argumentwas thaton the one side arethe naturalsciences, which deal with objects;on the othershouldbe the sciences of interpretation,which deal with subjectsthat talk back, interpretback, kick back. Inventingthe hermeneuticwas a trickydecision becauseit widenedthe gapbetween,for instance, the chemistswho interpretobjects thatdo not talk back (they claim) and the complex double or triplehermeneuticloops of, for example, the psychoanalyst who refrainsfrom talkingto a patientwho does talk,but unconsciously. But widening this gap was worththe price, because now thatthe methodsof sociology, history,and literarycriticismwere made completely different,no other scientist could make fun of the methods. (Indeed, hardlyany one can understandtheir Verstehenloops at all.) So naturalscientists might despise them as so much "Mickey Mouse stuff'; but, firmly confident in the power of the hermeneutic, the sociologist or psychoanalyst or historian could 6 Science, Technology, & HumanValues despise the naturalscientists back! And as long as one has grounds for despising the other departmentswith fatter budgets, life, even if poor, is bearable. So there were indeed many good reasons to invent a hermeneuticas differentas possible from the naturalsciences- survival of departmentsand professionsis as good a reason as any-but it has outlived its usefulness. Indeed,it is one of the obstaclesstandingin theway of the "impactof science studieson political philosophy,"my presentsubject. *** The whole belief in a distinctionbetween naturaland social sciences, the distinctionbetween questionslike "Whatbinds us, humans,together?"and "Whatbinds them, nonhumans,together?"comes from a very simple and elementary choice in research programs:the social scientists and social theoristsneverventuredinto the domainsof the naturalsciences, until a few yearsago. Eitherthey respectedthem andtriedto emulatethem on theirown territory;or they despised them and tried to be as immuneas possible from them. It should be clear that the spite and the critiqueof humanistsnicely covers up the naturalsciences and technicalknowledge.The more we heap critiqueonto them, the less dangerousthey are. Social scientists have gone on cherishingwhat they attacked,but they never went, with their methods and principles,with their queries and interests,to ask questions inside the very heart of atomic physics, biology, cosmology, ecology, engineering, geology, and so on. Everythinghas been studiedby social scientists, from the island of Bali to the ghettos of Los Angeles, from the street-cornerpeddlersto jazz band players,from automobileworkersto autisticchildren-everything, that is, except laboratories,executive rooms, computers, engineers, and weapon systems. The peripheryis studied-the margin,not the centers;the social, not the naturaland the technical;the soft, not the hard.This does not mean thatpolitical philosophershave been ignorantof science and technologyalthoughthe absurddivisions of curriculamight have helped some of them to remaincrasslyignorantas faras science was concerned.But manyof them, on the contrary(thinkof Comte, Durkheim,Weber),were highly literatein the sciences of their time. However, scientific literacyis not the issue, for a reasonthatbecamevisible only when scoresof sociologists, anthropologists, historians,and economists, started,fifteen years ago, to penetrateinto these hostile lands:the departmentsof science on the otherside of campus. Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 7 Their discovery has been this: the science made, the science taught,the science known, bearslittle resemblanceto science in the making,science in the searching,science uncertainand unknown.The whole edifice of epistemology, all the cliches about scientific method, about what it is to be a scientist, the paraphernaliaof Science, was constructedout of science-made, out of science-past,never out of science in the making,science now. This humbleand simple discovery is subvertingthe partitionbetweenthe social and naturalsciences, this shamefulYaltaPactthatkeeps all of us, hard and soft scientists,with all our family resemblances,trappedon two sides of one of the only IronCurtainsthatremain. The dramaticchange that has occurredin the last fifteen years is that in addition to what importantscientists say about themselves, in addition to what philosophers of science believe about science, we now have many detailed, empirical case studies of science and technics in the making, in many differentfields and countries;and these studies are independentfrom the vocabulary,interests,self-pleading,andproblemsof the scientistsand of theirepistemologists.To be sure, they do not replacethese otherversions of the story. They add to them from a completely new angle, an angle that is empirical, anthropological,entirely focused on science in action, and that mergesnicely with historyof science, which, in the meantime,hasabandoned its "whiggish" tendency to celebrate progress, big scientists, and great discoveries. So we are now in a position systematicallyto test, try, and comparethe images of science given by some scientistswith other images producedout of completely independentstudies. To measurethe novelty of this achievement,just imaginewhat economics would be if we hadto buildit only frommanagers'own self-servingaccounts. Imaginewhat sociology of laborwould be if we had to rely only on the pep talks of shop floor bosses. Imaginewhat political science would be if it were made by politiciansthemselves. Well, this is exactly what studies of science were before this movement startedalmost a generationago. Scientists themselves did all the talkingaccompaniedby their retinueof trumpetersand heraldsotherwiseknown as epistemologists, and protectedby the gang of critics otherwise known as humanists.A basic rule of method("Neverbelieve the informercompletely. Carefullydouble-checkwhat the informerssay.")was implementedcourageously for managers,politicians, Indians, or workers, but was not even contemplatedfor scientists. How do you daresay somethingof physics if you arenot a physicist?Well, by the same token,how do you daresay somethingof businessif you arenot 8 Science, Technology, & HumanValues a manager? Of politics if you are not a politician? Indeed, to push the absurdityto its end, how do you dare study a frog if you are not yourself a frog?A particleif you arenot yourselfaparticle?See how absurdthe critique is? So, now this absurdityis over: every study requiresboth independence and familiarity,distance and proximity,suspicion and confidence; and this holds for every field, naturaland social. If my biologist is able to become familiarwith the innerworkingsof a ratthathe is not, I can become familiar with the innerworkingsof the biologist that I am not. *** In a few pages, I cannot summarizetwenty years of what might be the most lively, prolific,busy, and internationalfield of social science, butI will pick up two featuresof science in the makingthatarecrucialfor the linkwith political philosophy:its collective characterand its exegetic character. The first featureis this: naturalscientists are not called "natural"because they are turnedtoward nature,while scholars in the humanitiesare turned toward society. As much as anyone else, naturalscientists are turnednot towardnaturebut towardtheircolleagues, theirinstruments,theirskills, the workof theirlaboratories.So why arethey called "natural"? Because in order to act on theircolleagues, they mobilize resourcescoming from nonhumans. This little counter-Copernicanrevolutionis simple but radical.Walkinto a laboratory,open the pages of Science or Nature(I referhere to thejournals of this name, not the GreatBook of Nature),attenda conference,participate in hearings-what will you see? Nature?Of course not. You will see a collective of practicingscientiststurningwith skill around instruments,tryingto interestand to convince each other,and, in orderto do so, introducinginto theirexchanges slides, tables, documents,photographs, andreports,coming fromfar away places of quitedifferentscales (very small particles, very big galaxies, very abstractmodels, very tight calculations, very extremeexperiments).Dependingon the heat of the discussion, on the mustering,mobilization,anduse of these resources,othercolleagues will or will not be convinced. Oh, those dear, dear colleagues, how hard they are to convince! How obstinateyou have to be in orderto keep theminterested,to makethemlisten to make them buy the argumentand confess, "Yes, I believe you have incontrovertiblyshown that!"How often, too often, do they say, "Itdoes not work thatway,""Youcouldjust as well say this,""Youoverlookedthis cause of error,""Yourmethodologyis rotten,""Thisis not good science," "Itis all Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 9 a bunchof nonsense,""It is of no interestwhatsoever."(Textbookscientists are not supposed to say such awful things, but scientists in their natural environment,in the wild so to speak, do talk that way.) And here you are, obliged to go back to yourlaboratory,write anothergrantapplication,maybe change field or instruments,dispose of hundreds of new rats, run new computerprograms,invent new skills. Why?If you have natureon yourside, just believe in It and in yourself.Alas, it does not work thatway. You are in the handsof yourcolleagues, dearcolleagues.Yourclaimperishesor survives because of what they do to it, not only because of what you do to it. You can be persuaded,butyou cannotconvince alone-or else the doorof the asylum mightbe openedto you, insteadof the doorto the Royal Academyof Sweden. So much for this cliche of hermeneutics,this claim that social scientists talk to people who talk back,while naturalscientists talk to naturethatdoes not talkback. This is beside the point. Scientiststalknot to naturebut to their colleagues, and those creatureshave the very unpleasantcustom of talking back, and sometimes kicking back (cutting funds, revolutionizingtheory, introducingnew equipment, creating new disciplines). Of course, if you consider completed science, science off the assembly line, after people are convinced, then some of themwill be said to have natureon theirside while others will be said to have society on theirs. But if you take science in the making, no such dichotomyis feasible. Everyone is engaged in a collective struggleto interestandconvince;andhis or herlife - scientific life -depends entirelyon this collective fate. Natureis not behindtheirbacks, actinglike a good parentwho can tell them apart.Nature waits to be fleshed out and decided upon by the strugglingcollective. And surprisinglyenough, this collective does not differentiate at all between resourcescoming from the naturalor from the social sciences. In this huge meltingpot, the big differencedisappears;everyone seizes everything at hand.Do scientists reachconsensus only because of collective peer pressure?Of course not, since they have mobilized data and nonhumans,to ease, deflect, or modify the peer pressure.Do they reach consensus, then, becauseof the suddeneruptionof naturein theirdebates?Of coursenot, since they have mobilized peers, professions, allies, and colleagues, to build, deflect, modify, compose the data. This is the key discovery of science studies:we are confrontedneitherwith society nor with nature;we have to shift our attention 90? in order to follow scientists in action. After two hundredyears of critique,and afterhaving used the trope"not only . .. but also" we can ignore these two impossible groupings:things-in-themselves, and humans-among-themselves. 10 Science, Technology, & HumanValues The second cliche of the hermeneuticis aboutthe differencebetween the science of texts-from the venerablebiblical exegesis all the way to modem literarycriticism throughhistorical narrativeand psychoanalysis-and the naturalsciences, whose reasoningis eitherinductiveor deductivebut always aboutobjects "out there." But again, walk to a laboratory,open a journal,talk with scientists, look at them: they are surroundedby hundredsof textual documentsof various origins,of tracesof differentinstruments,of faintparchmentsfromdecaying fossils, of subtle clues from more or less reliablepolls; they are assembling them, reshufflingthem, discountingsome, stressingothers.... Look at the exegetic work necessary to associate in a fine web iridium levels at the Cretaceous boundary,the dinosaurs'demise, the probabilityof meteorite impact, and nuclearwinter, all of them to build up the Nemesis hypothesis; each threadis weak, the whole is robust.No historiancould be more astute in digging out an indefinitenumberof subtle clues and tracesfrom archives thanthese naturalscientists,who aredoingjust that,but in anotherliterature. No, this exegetic work on faint and disparatetraces is fully comparable to that of the scholars who establish the text of Plutarchout of twenty irreconcilablelessons, or those who reconstructthe daily occupationsof the inhabitantsof the caves of Lascauxor the split-seconddecay of the particles at CERN. Hermeneuticsis not a characteristicof the social sciences; it is the property of all exegetic work; and, as far as texts are concerned, each departmentof any campusis made of exegetes who differonly in the source of their texts, not in the hermeneuticskill they deploy. All sciences are the offspringof biblical exegesis. The Book of Natureis the second tome of the Bible; this is what scientists since Galileo have echoed. I know what your objectionmight be. "Yes, but the signs written on parchmentsand painted on the caves of Lascaux are made by people, to whom we can attributeinterests,intentionality, and semiotic ability.The same cannot be said of the inanimateidiots down there in the lab that unwillingly scribble trajectoriesinside bubble chambers, of the dumb nerve cells that fill in peaks and spikes on physiographs,of the mute rats that answertests and trialswith their feet. Those do not want to communicatewith humans,in the way humanswould do." This is a grave and importantobjection, which defines humans and nonhumansin a certaintraditionalway. This definitionis now,underourvery eyes, being slowly overcome by the very work we are all doing, in social studiesof science andtechnology.This is the objectionthatallows Habermas to limit access to free and honest communicationsto the poor humans. Latour/ ScienceandPoliticalPhilosophy 11 Before going into this big question, I wish to avoid a misunderstanding. Do not tell me thatthis emergingpicture-of scientific activityturnedtoward a collective of skilled experimentersand turning around silent, artificial objects, insteadof towardnature-destroys what is beautiful,solid, and true in science. The beauty, solidity, and truth of the old picture was only an appearance.It was all coming from a reflectionof the qualitiesattributedto or to scientific-methodthesuperiordesign of nature-as-it-really-is-out-there as-it-should-be.Wehave done nothingmoreto thesciences thanwhatDarwin did for the species. He did not destroytheirbeauty,multiplicity,and coherence by abandoningthe Designer floating above all species who (or which) was supposedto make them what they are. On the contrary,by letting them struggle,fight, ally, mingle, copulate,andpopulate,he addedto theirbeauty, diversity,and coherence. The same is true for the sciences. Now there is a series of real mechanismsby which they can generateorderout of disorder, coherence out of competition,diversity out of homogeneity.They are true, they are beautiful, they are diverse, they are robust,some of them are poisonous.Above all, they aremade,in the making,andhuman,andnonhuman. But to understandin what sense they are humanand nonhuman,one has to tacklethebig questionall over again:Whatis thecollective madeof? What ties us all together? *** I will indicate the answer,thanksto a marvelousbook by Steve Shapin and Simon Schaffer called Leviathanand theAir-Pump.1As you can guess from the title, the book is a study of the debate between, on the one hand, RobertBoyle, the mechanicalphilosopher(todaywe would say "physicist"), one of the designersof the vacuumpump,founderof the Royal Society, and inventorof most of the scientific style we still use today in writingempirical articles;with, on the other,ThomasHobbes,anothermechanicalphilosopher, authorof the Leviathan, founder of most of the argumentson the social contract,inventorin manyways of the modernstateunderwhich we still live today, the commonwealth,res publica. Thus the debate is between, on the one hand,a naturalscientist, one of the greatest,andon the other,a political philosopher,maybe the greatest. Where could you find a better simile for organizinga lectureon "politicalphilosophyand science studies"? Both Boyle andHobbesarerationalistsandmechanists;theybothridicule theirprescientificpast. But they fight with one another.Hobbes is a scientist 12 Science, Technology, & HumanValues whose science has been completely eliminatedfrom later accounts. He is taken seriously only as a political philosopher,while Boyle had a political philosophy,which has been completely eliminatedfrom later accounts. He is taken seriously only as a physicist. Shapin and Schafferreconstructtheir debatesand give back to Hobbes his science and to Boyle his politics. I will arguethatit is theirvery dispute,and the very forgettingof its solution, that usherHobbes'sandBoyle's contemporariesintothe modernworld,a modem world that is now coming to a close. Over what ground did they fight? Precisely on this question that hermeneuticiansunproblematicallybelieve to be settled-because it was settled in the seventeenth century:Who or what speaks? Who or what is allowed to have meaning?Who or what should not speak? Whom or what should be grantedor denied intentionality? Nature used to speak directly and symbolically; let it be mute-both Hobbes and Boyle agree on this. Matterused to have an intentionality,a formativepower; let it be bruteand senseless-Hobbes and Boyle agree on that. Clerics, from every church,used to speak, directly inspiredby God, fueling religiouswars, while the Bible text could speak directlyto everyone reading it with a good faith. Let the Bible speak indirectly and only of nonpolitical matters,says Boyle. Let God not speak at all to anyone says Hobbes;otherwise,we areback again into civil wars and dissent.Fromnow on only the statewill interpretwhat the text says. The king used to speak in the name of God? Let him speak only as the spokesmanof citizens engaged in a social covenant, says Hobbes. All right,says Boyle, but I want to grantbrutenaturalmatterthe possibility, to be surenot of talkingor of willing, butof behavingmeaningfullyinside the vacuumpump.Impossible!says Hobbes. Isolatedfacts are meaningless. It will fuel dissent again. Everyone will come with experimentsand start disputing all over again. No, says Boyle, we will limit carefully who is allowed to interpretmeaningfulexperiments.We will createa communityof notable witnesses-scientists-who will be authorizedto speak for nature. Impossible,Hobbesretorts,factionalismwill be back again.The stateshould destroy experimental science and keep only mathematiciansand social theorists.Scandalous,Boyle retorts;meaningfulandcarefullycircumscribed mattersof fact are not dangerous,only wild interpretationsare. Here you see the beauty of the book. Hobbes and Boyle areco-inventing the two artificialconstructionsunderwhich we still live today:the Commonwealth, which is an artificial construction;and the laboratoryexperiment, which is also an artificialconstruct. Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 13 What are the two mechanicalphilosophersdoing? Why are they reshuffling powers, speech, will, intentionality,exegetic abilities, among kings, states, gods, priests, experiments,nature,matter? They are draftingwhat I will call a political constitutionof truth.Michel Foucaultused the word "economics"or "politicaleconomy of truth." A constitutionis the writtenor unwrittendistributionof rights.It decides who will vote or not;it organizesthe powers,the variousparliaments,houses, and senates; it dispatchesrightsbetween executive, legislative, andjudicial bodies, imposing checks and balances, and often telling the way it can itself be modified. However,this moderndefinitionof a constitutiondeals with the political realmonly, that is, the representationof humans,called citizens. A political constitutionof truthis broaderand unwritten,but it also distributespowers, will, rights to speak, and checks and balances. It decides on the crucial distributionof competence: for instance, matterhas or does not have will; God speaks only to the heartand not of politics; experimentsare all rightas long as they remain inside a circumscribedcommunity of experimenters; only landowners are allowed to vote for the parliament;women have no rights;thereare no witches but only madwomen;and so on. What makes Boyle and Hobbes more importantdraftsmenof a constitution than Washingtonor Robespierreis that they did not deal only with the human and political rights of the eighteenth century. Indeed, they were inventing the very dichotomy between humanpolitical representationand nonhumanscientific representation. One examplefromBoyle will show how this redistributionof competence occurs in theirdispute.Divers undera diver's bell do not feel the increaseof pressure,say Boyle's opponents.This does notproveanything,Boyle retorts. The pressureof waterin our recitedexperimenthaving manifesteffects upon inanimatebodies, which are not capableof prepossessions,or giving us partial informations,will have muchmoreweight with unprejudicedpersons,thanthe suspicious, and sometimes disagreeing accounts of ignorant divers, whom prejudicateopinions may much sway, and whose very sensations,as those of other vulgar men, may be influenced by predispositions,and so many other circumstances,thatthey may easily give occasion to mistakes.(Citedin Shapin and Schaffer 1986, 218) Good scientists can rely on meaningful inanimate bodies more than on talking (and lying), vulgar buddies. The same problem of representation appearsin politics and in science. Yes, naturealso is represented;this is a very common usage of the word. But when we use it, we forgetthatit is part 14 Science, Technology, & HumanValues of a constitution,that natureis attributedthe constitutionalrightto be mute but to behave meaningfullyand unwittingly,while citizens are allowed to speak. Comparethis rule with the following example. Only a few people, landowners,may vote while the others,the vulgumpecus, should be denied any meaningto theirdisorderlybehavior. The second rule seems very shockingto us. "Whyonly landowners?"we ask. Clearly it is a historical construct. It should be changed. It has been changed.We can hardlyimagine a democracywithout the principleof one man,one vote. But this is truealso on the otherside. "Whymuteexperimentalmattersof facts?" This also is a historical construct.It can be changed. It has been changedin the course of history,each disciplineredistributingthe rightsand duties of inanimatebodies. Walkinto a laboratory,open scientificjournals. No two disciplines agree on what to expect from theirobjects/subjects.Are dolphinsand whales treatedby ethologistslike marblestones in the vacuum pump?Of course not. Are cells in cultureexpected to behave like particles? Of coursenot. Are bacterialgenes in a molecularbiology expectedto behave in the sameway as mammalembryosin a developmentalbiology laboratory? No. They are as differentfrom one anotheras the attributionof meaningto humans in a behavioristlab is different from that on the psychoanalytic couch, or as far apartas the closed shop principle is from the open shop principlein laborrelations. Do you see now the enormous,the deadly mistakeof thosewell-meaning social theoristswhen they defendthe hermeneuticby the so-called commonsense argumentthathumansspeak and have intentionwhile nonhumansare deaf and dumb?They accept as a given the resultof a political constitution of truththathas firstdispatchedspeech, deafness, anddumbness.They pride themselves for being criticalon the political side, but they swallow it hook, line, and sinker when the politics of things is involved. Their position on science is as reactionaryas if they were consideringthedenialof voting rights to proletarians,or to women, as a nonhistoricalor commonsensegiven. This paradoxicalmixtureof criticalandreactionaryattitudes-critical for social, reactionaryfor things-is one of the sad featuresof our intellectual life, since it is answered on the other side by the equally reactionaryand critical attitudeof many naturalscientists, who are active, intelligent, and skeptical in their science but swallow as a given any belief about the organizationof society. This is the harsh result of the Yalta Pact I mentionedearlier.The Iron Curtainhas been lifted everywhere, but it is still cutting through family resemblancesanda richweb of ties betweennaturalandsocial sciences. This Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 15 web is the implicitpoliticalconstitutionof truth,which shouldbe scrutinized, explicated, redrafted,and voted in common. As Foucault([1970] 1986, 26) said: The questionis no longer to free truthfrom the system of power- it would be a chimerasince truthitself is power-but to separatethe power of truthfrom the hegemonic forms (social, economic, cultural) inside which it circulates today. In brief, the political question is no longer that of mistake, illusion, alienatedconsciousness or ideology, it is thatof truthitself. *** Fortunatelythis shamefuldivision is coming to a close. What was the final outcome of the debate between Hobbes and Boyle? This very divide, this very YaltaPact. On the one hand,social theory;on the other,the sciences. On the one hand,the representationof citizens, nakedand talkinghumansengagingin the social contract,out of which emergespokespersons, the politicians. On the other,the representationof things, mutebut meaningfulexperimentalmattersof fact, cared for by their spokespersons, the scientists. The two questions with which I started-"What binds us, humans, together?"and "Whatbinds them, nonhumans,together?"-get two entirely differenttypes of answers:social forces on the one hand, naturalforces on the other. In addition, of course, the science of Hobbes and the political philosophy of Boyle were each deleted from the picture. To Hobbes, the Leviathan;to Boyle, the air-pump.The modernworld was born. I define a world as modem when the political constitutionof truthcreates those two separateparliaments,one hiddenfor things,the otherin the open for citizens. A no man'slandwas createdalong this new boundary.But whathappened to all the mixed questions I have presentedat the beginning, to all these imbroglios of political and scientific affairs, these tangles of ozone layer, frozen embryos, dying whales, printed chips, electronic money, and rain forests?They have grown,andgrown,anddevelopedfor threecenturies,and populatedthe no man'slandto such an extentthattodayeveryproblemseems to be crowdedon this tiny borderline,and there is not much left on the two extremes:somethingpurelysocial? ,omething purely natural? The tangles are crowded there, but they are still without political representation,withoutsocial theory.They arenot supposedto exist. They arelike those Germanfamilies until December 1989, or like Koreanfamilies today, with one branchon one side of the borderwhile the otherbranchlives under anotherregime. 16 Science, Technology, & HumanValues We can now safely reject the notion of the hermeneutic,which does nothingbut reinforcethis partition,and startto dismantlealso this Curtain, focusing all our efforts on offering a representationand a homelandto these disunitedfamilies. How shall we do so? Look at the spokespersonsfor nature,assembled every day throughthe auspices of the newspapers,of television, in corporatesuites, in the classroom, on the bench in courts.Are they trying to reach an ideal community of speech thatwould dominatethe mere instrumentalrationalityof science? No, they all gatherwith the constituenciesthey representbehindtheirbacks. Herearethosewho speakin the nameof thewhales;here arethosewho speak for the logging and timberindustry;on their side is the lobbyist for frozen embryos;next is anotherone representingbusiness interests;anotherspeaks for the Milky Way,in the name of starsand black holes; anotherone speaks in the name of the soil; anotherfor the farmers;anotherfor the Greyhound bus drivers;anotherfor the mining of uranium;these are the representatives from the ozone layer, and they are narrowlydefeatedby these others,who speak for the producersof CFCs; and look, among all these self-designed representativesand senators, here is a representativefor the district of Blacksburg.How extraordinary,how rare, how tiny! A human elected by fellow humans. The similarities between all these representatives,their connectionsandcontroversiesandtangles:arethey not muchmoreimportant thanthe moot distinctionbetween those who have been elected to speak in the name of voting citizens, and all the othersdesignedto speak in the name of whales, workers,forests, capitals,or stars? But then if we acceptsuch a parliament,is it the end of the modem world? Yes. The divide so clearly highlightedby the Hobbes-Boyle dispute is untenable.Why? For a simple reason:it makes it impossible to understand both how it happensthat society holds together,and how it happensthatthe sciences are robust. It transformsin a double miracle the holding, gluing, tying togetherof our world. Look on the side of society.Are we tied togetherby social forces?Maybe, but probablynot thatmuch.Thereare manyotherties thatget into the social ones. We are held togetherby loyalties but also by telephones, electricity, media, computers,trains,and planes. "Yes,"a sociologist would say, "but these are not social, they are technical."This means that they can be both despised and admired,that is, protected. Is it my fault if they have been broughtto bearon our social links, reinforcinganddisruptingthem,shuffling them around?If they have now gained the eminent dignity of socialness, morality,and meaning? Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 17 Turnto the otherside. Whatties all the sciences andthe technicstogether? Nature?Yes, maybe in part, as a useful ingredientand resource, but also people, loyalties, institutions,collectives, passions, monies, and many other social ties. "Yes," a natural scientist would say, "but you are confusing everything,throwingeverythinginto a huge melting pot." Is it my pot or yours?Who is bringingin cells, chips, stars,and throwing them in the melting pot fromwhich ourworld emerges. I? Or the scientists? It is not because this melting pot should not exist-according to the old divide-that it is not to be thoughtaboutand tackledseriously.Whatshould we prefer?Ourold beliefs, or the study of the society we live in? Am I jeopardizingall the nice useful divides in favorof a "seamlessweb" aboutwhich nothinguseful can be said?Is it morecomplicatedto studythese new tangles of social and nonsocial ties than the artificialbrokenhalves of the recentpast?I do not thinkso, becausethis is exactly what anthropologists andethnographersall know how to do when theygo to anotherculture/nature. They know that in the study of all the other cultures, cosmology, land ownership, taxonomy, technology, kinship, myth structureshave to be brought together. It is only when, kicked out of their traditionalhunting territory,ethnographerscome back home thatthey startbelieving in the usual distinctions.So, as a result,they know how to studyall the culturesbuttheirs, our culture/nature.Paradoxically,we know more about most other cultures/naturesthanaboutours. You understandnow why the modernworld is coming to a close. What was setting it apartfrom all the others, this GreatExternalDivide between Us, scientificized and technicized Westernersand Them, the prescientific, the pretechnical,whoever they are, was due to this Great InternalDivide summedup by the Boyle-Hobbes dispute:social representationon one side, naturalrepresentationon the other.But if this internaldivide is untenable, the other,too, falls apart.We are an anthropologicalculture/naturelike all the others. We, too, should be studied following the same continuous,rich web of associationsbetween humanandnonhumanties. Is this postmodernism?No, it is not. It is probablysomething more like premodernism,or, I would say, nonmodernism.Postmodernismis a disappointedformof modernism.It shareswith its enemy all its featuresbut hope. It believes in rationalization,in the very distinctionbetween Us and Them, in the very same divide between representationof things and representation of people. But it has stopped believing in the joint promises of naturalism and socialism. The nonmodernworld, which we entered in 1989 after the dual failuresof the naturalistprogramand of the socialist one, is simply the realizationthatwe have never enteredthe modernworld. 18 Science, Technology, & HumanValues We pride ourselves on being brandedby the terrible stigma of being Different.We are masochisticallyproudof being atheistic,deist, materialist, disenchanted, consumerist, rationalist, capitalist, Americanized. This is pride, pure pride. We would be completely unable to live up to these ideal sins. We neverleft the old anthropologicalmatrix.We cannotbe postmodern because,for a start,we have neverbeen modern.In spiteof theHobbes-Boyle constitutionalcompromise, humans and nonhumanshave never ceased to interfere. We, too, live undera political constitutionof truththatcan be changedthat should be changed to recognize and accept for what it is this long association of humanswith nonhumans.As long as naturehad to be conquered,we could live under the modern,divided constitution.Now that it has to be protectedandthatevery single politicalandethicalproblemis made of science andtechnologyin a single continuum,it cannot.As long as society had to be denouncedin the nameof a science of society, we hadto live under the modern,divided constitution.Now thatthe dissolutionof socialism has broken down the very scientism that permittedthe denunciationstrategies, we have to experimentcollectively with whatsocieties andnaturesmay bear. This most extraordinaryyear, which has seen the bicentennial of the FrenchRevolution,the completedissolutionof the IronCurtain,andthe first political meetings on the global warmingof the Earth,is an auspiciousone to bringhumansand nonhumansunderthe same continuousprotection.Two centuriesago, our forebearsstruggledto invent a political representationof citizens, of speaking and voting humans."No taxationwithout representation," they insisted. This was part of the Enlightenment.During the two intervening centuries, enormous masses of nonhumanshave entered our daily lives. We live with them;we like, love, or hate some of them;we have delegated to them much of our morality,politics, and social ties. Every day we are confrontedwith tangles of humanand nonhumanaffairs. It is time to do for these new masses what our forebearsdid for humans. "No innovationwithoutrepresentation" or "no pollutionwithoutrepresentation"could be among the mot d'ordres. Is it not worththe effortto pursuethe Enlightenmentinto the darktangles of science and society mixtures? This is a common undertakingfor political philosophy and for science studies, a task large enough for all of those who work under the label of "science, technology, and society." ProfessorMullins, whose memory we honorhere,would have liked to see thefield to which he contributedso much to establishbe called to such a worthy task. Latour/ Science and Political Philosophy 19 Note 1. I cannot possibly do justice here to this beautifulbook. For a more elaborateanalysis of the book and of the notion of constitution,see Latour(1990, forthcoming). References Foucault, Michel. [1970] 1986. La crise dans la tete. Translatedin The Foucault reader, edited by P. Rabinow.Harmondsworth:Penguin.(my translation) Latour,Bruno. 1990. Postmodern?No amodern.Steps toward an anthropologyof science. Studies in Historyand Philosophyof Science 21:165-71. . Forthcoming.One more turn after the social turn: Easing science studies into the non-modem word. In The social dimensions of science, edited by E. MacMullin. Notre Dame, IN: Universityof Notre Dame Press. Shapin,Steve, andSimon Schaffer.1986. Leviathanand the air-pump.Princeton,NJ: Princeton UniversityPress. BrunoLatouris Professorat the Centrede Sociologie de l'Innovationat the Ecoles des Mines (62 BoulevardSt. Michel, 75006 Paris). He has published several books and articles, includingScience in Action andThe Pasteurizationof France.