On Adaptive Optics: The Historical Constitution of Architectures for Expert Perception in Astronomy
Author(s) -
Ian Lowrie
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
spontaneous generations a journal for the history and philosophy of science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1913-0465
DOI - 10.4245/sponge.v6i1.16133
Subject(s) - digitization , observatory , constitution , factory (object oriented programming) , observational astronomy , perception , computer science , epistemology , astronomy , cognitive science , physics , philosophy , psychology , law , telescope , telecommunications , political science , programming language
This article charts the development of the modern astronomical
observational system. I am interested most acutely in the digitization
of this system in general, and in the introduction of adaptive optics in
particular. I argue that these features have been critical in establishing
the modern observatory as a factory for scientific data, rather than as a
center of calculation in its own right. Throughout, the theoretical focus
is on the nature of technological evolution in the observational system,
understood as inextricably bound up with both the system-internal
drive to surpass the limits imposed upon the distributed cognition of
the researcher and the boundary at which empirical objects resolve
themselves into technical objects. In short, this article explores the
historically constituted character of expert astronomical perception,
arguing that it is impossible to understand without constant reference
to its material substrate
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