Technoscience, biopolitics, and biobanking

Authors

  • Stanislav M. Gavrilenko

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5840/eps20205714

Keywords:

biopolitics, technoscience, ontology of science, technoobjects, biobanking

Abstract

The author considers two additions to analysis of technoscience, suggested by Olga Koshovets and Igor Frolov. First, technoscience is not just regime of knowledge production, which brings into play enormous technological and organizational resources, but is a regime, regulated by mandatory requirement to produce knowledge, which should be transformed into endowed with market value goods and services (technoobjects). Second, technoscience is an ever-faster colonization of natural and social worlds by technoobjects. In the author's view, the main problem with technoscience is not to hold the next round of conceptual clarification and theoretical reorganization of previous distinctions (nature/society, basic science/applied science, scientific fact/technoobject, social connections/technological connections) or introduction of new ones. The challenge is how to turn the concrete realization of technoscience into empirical research objects. The complexity of such enterprise is demonstrated in the case of research biobanking, which has become one of exemplary embodiment of technoscience and contemporary mode of biopolitics.

Published

2020-05-27

How to Cite

[1]
2020. Technoscience, biopolitics, and biobanking. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 57, 1 (May 2020), 38–44. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5840/eps20205714.