Professor Steve Fuller
Steve
Fuller, Ph.D., D.Litt., AcSS, FRSA
holds the Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology in the Department
of Sociology.
His latest book is
The Proactionary Imperative: A Foundation for Transhumanism.
He is most closely associated with the
research program of
social epistemology. Originally trained in the history and philosophy of
science (Ph.D., 1985, University of Pittsburgh), he is the founder of
the research program of social epistemology. It is the name of a
quarterly journal he founded with Taylor & Francis in 1987, as well as
his first book
Social Epistemology (Indiana University Press,
1988). He authored
Philosophy of Science and Its Discontents, 2nd edn. (Guilford
Press, 1993),
Philosophy, Rhetoric, and the End of Knowledge (University
of Wisconsin Press, 1993; 2nd edn. with James Collier, Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, 2004),
Science (Open University Press and University of
Minnesota Press, 1997),
The Governance of Science: Ideology and the
Future of the Open Society (Open University Press, 2000),
Thomas Kuhn: A
Philosophical History for Our Times (University of Chicago
Press, 2000);
Knowledge Management Foundations (Butterworth-Heinemann,
2002);
Kuhn vs
Popper: The Struggle for the Soul of Science (Icon and Columbia
University Press, 2003);
The Intellectual (Icon 2005);
The Philosophy of Science and Technology Studies (Routledge,
2006);
The New Sociological Imagination (Sage, 2006);
The Knowledge Book:
Key Concepts in Philosophy, Science and Culture (Acumen, 2007);
Science vs Religion?
(Polity, 2007);
New Frontiers in Science and Technology Studies (Polity,
2007);
Dissent over Descent (Icon, 2008);
The Sociology of Intellectual Life (Sage, 2009);
Science: The Art of Living (Acumen, 2010); and
Humanity
2.0: What It Means to Be Human Past, Present and Future
(Palgrave
Macmillan, 2011).
Steve has organized two global cyberconferences for the UK’s
Economic
and Social Research Council: one on public understanding of science
(1998), and another on peer review in the social sciences (1999). He has
spoken in 30 countries, often keynoting professional academic
conferences, and has been a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts since
1995. He was awarded a D.Litt. by Warwick in 2007 for significant
career-long contributions to scholarship. He was appointed to the
Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology in 2011, and is a Fellow of
the UK Academy of Social Sciences. In 2012 he was elected as a member of
the European Academy of Sciences and Arts (Division I: Humanities).
His writings have been translated into twenty languages. His book
Kuhn
vs Popper was named book of the month (Feb 2005) by the US
magazine,
Popular Science,
The Intellectual was named a book of the year by
the
UK
magazine New Statesman for 2005, and
Dissent over Descent was
named
book
of the week by Times Higher Education in July 2008.
Steve was UK partner for a Ford Foundation project on the future of
higher education, UK partner for an EU FP6 project on the Knowledge
Politics of Converging Technologies, and Principal Investigator for an
ESRC project on Mimetic Factors on Individual Behaviour. He is active
generally in the Science, Politics, and Society research cluster in the
department.
Since coming to Warwick in 1999, he has supervised several Ph.D.
students, taught on the Doctoral Training Programme and the MA in Social
Research. He has been convenor of the MA in Philosophy and Social Theory
and now teaches on Politics and Social Theory. At the undergraduate
level, he has taught the social theory of law, sociology of knowledge
and science and, most recently media sociology. He welcomes students
working in the sociology of knowledge, history, philosophy and sociology
of science, the nature of the university and intellectual life, and
normative issues relating to recent developments on the impact of
science and technology on the political order, especially concerning our
changing conceptions of the biological and what it means to be human.
Watch
TEDxWarwick — Professor Steve Fuller,
Steve Fuller — The Proactionary Imperative — Warwick
University, and
Being Human in the Information Age — Professor Steve
Fuller.
Read
The Moral Equivalent of War — Steve Fuller,
Steve Fuller: it’s time for Humanity 2.0, and
Beyond the precautionary principle.
Read his
Wikipedia profile.
Follow his
Twitter feed.