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Meeting the universe halfway

realism and social constructivism without contradiction

Karen Barad

pp. 161-194

The morning after giving an invited lecture on the socially constructed nature of scientific knowledge, I had the privilege of watching as a STM (scanning tunneling microscope) operator zoomed in on a sample of graphite, and as we approached a scale of thousands of nanometers… hundreds of nanometers… tens of nanometers… down to fractions of a nanometer, individual carbon atoms were imaged before our very eyes. The experience was so sublime that it sent chills through my body — and I stood there, a theoretical physicist who, like most of my kind, rarely ventures into the basements of physics buildings experimental colleagues call "home", conscious that this was one of those life moments when the amorphous jumble of history seems to crystallize in a single instant. How many times had I recounted for my students the evidence for the existence of atoms? And there they were — just the right size and grouped in a hexagonal structure with the interatomic spacings as predicted by theory! "If only Einstein, Rutherford, Bohr, and especially Mach, could have seen this!" I found myself exclaiming.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1742-2_9

Full citation:

Barad, (1996)., Meeting the universe halfway: realism and social constructivism without contradiction, in L. Hankinson Nelson & J. Nelson (eds.), Feminism, science, and the philosophy of science, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 161-194.

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