STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Geert Somsen
University of Columbia/Maastricht, History

on

"Science and World Order": Uses of Science in Plans for International 
Government, 1899-1950

Monday, March 9
12:15-2:00 pm
K262, the Bowie-Vernon Room, Knafel Building, CGIS, 1737 Cambridge Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP via our 
online<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 
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 before Thursday morning, March 5.

Abstract:   The universal character of science has often been used as a model 
for international relations. This was true already in the early-modern ideal of 
the Republic of Letters, where the community of the learned presented itself as 
elevated above the rivalries of nations. And it continued in the twentieth 
century, when similar notions made their way into the design of political 
international institutions, such as UNESCO, the League of Nations, and the 
International Court of Arbitration. In my current project I study a variety of 
such schemes ranging across the political spectrum. I will discuss a few of 
them (probably H.G. Wells’ World State campaign, a plan for science and 
arbitration, and the mobilization of “scienza universale” in fascist Italy) and 
try to situate my kind of research within the widely differing ways in which 
STS has analyzed the relations of science to political practice and ideology.

Biography:   Geert Somsen is Marie Curie fellow at Columbia University’s 
Department of History, for 2014-15 and 2015-16. He was trained in history of 
science and STS at Utrecht University and the University of California, San 
Diego. His research deals with uses of science in political discourse, for 
example in the shaping of international relations, the subject of his STS 
Circle presentation. He has also worked on uses of science in British WWII 
propaganda, on the promotion of “scientific planning” as a postwar policy 
instrument, and on science in representations of political neutrality 
(Neutrality in Twentieth-Century Europe: Intersections of  Science, Culture and 
Politics after the First World War. London: Routledge, 2012, edited with 
Rebecka Lettevall and Sven Widmalm). Geert Somsen is on leave from Maastricht 
University, the Netherlands, where he is a member of the STS program and the 
history department, and was, until recently, coordinator of the Netherlands 
Graduate Research School for Science, Technology and Modern Culture.




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http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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