•  11
    Reset Modernity! (edited book)
    with Peter Weibel
    MIT Press. 2016.
  •  75
    A Few Steps Toward an Anthropology of the Iconoclastic Gesture
    Science in Context 10 (1): 63-83. 1997.
    The ArgumentA large part of our critical acumen depends on a clear distinction between what is real and what is constructed, what is out there in the nature of things and what is in there in the representation we make of them. Something has been lost however for the sake of this clarity and a heavy price has been paid for this dichotomy between ontological questions on the one hand and the epistemological questions on the other: it has become impossible to understand the simplest features of act…Read more
  •  863
    On technical mediation
    Common Knowledge 3 (2): 29-64. 1994.
  •  85
    Is Re-modernization Occurring - And If So, How to Prove It?
    Theory, Culture and Society 20 (2): 35-48. 2003.
    On the face of it, there is no connection between the social theory developed by Ulrich Beck under the name of `second modernization' and the post-ethnomethodological argument developed by Bruno Latour and his colleagues under the name of actor-network theory. Yet they are both concerned with empirical evidence of a major shift in modernity. Hence the idea of elaborating an empirical test to probe the extent to which `second modernization' is a real phenomenon, or rather, as is suggested here, a…Read more
  •  428
    Visualisation and Cognition: Drawing Things Together
    Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 3 (T): 207-260. 2012.
    The author of the present paper argues that while trying to explain the institutional success of the science and its broad social impact, it is worth throwing aside the arguments concerning the universal traits of human nature, changes in the human mentality, or transformation of the culture and civilization, such as the development of capitalism or bureaucratic power. In the 16th century no new man emerged, and no mutants with overgrown brains work in modern laboratories. So one must also rejec…Read more
  •  12
    From realpolitik to dingpolitik
    In Bruno Latour & Peter Weibel (eds.), Making Things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy, Mit Press (ma). pp. 14--44. 2005.
  • Technologia jako utrwalone społeczeństwo
    Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 4 (2): 17-49. 2013.
  •  325
    In this book Bruno Latour brings together these different approaches to provide a lively and challenging analysis of science, demonstrating how social context..
  •  56
    Biopouvoir et vie publique
    Multitudes 1 (1): 94-98. 2000.
  •  138
    From the book: What is to be done with political ecology? Nothing. What is to be done? Political ecology!
  •  246
    MORALITY OR MORALISM? An Exercise in Sensitization
    with Émilie Hache
    Common Knowledge 16 (2): 311-330. 2010.
    The field of “science studies” has often been suspected of dubious moral grounds because of its intensive concern with nonhumans; the accusation is made by those who use a roughly Kantian definition of what it is to occupy the moral high ground. By evaluating four contrasting texts (by Comte-Sponville, Kant, Serres, and Lovelock) in tandem, this article explores what an “objective morality” would look like, and it considers how to compare the Kantian axiology with the actor-network theory's poss…Read more
  •  124
    We have never been modern
    Harvard University Press. 1993.
    A summation of the work of one of the most influential and provocative interpreters of science, it aims at saving what is good and valuable in modernity and ...
  •  134
    How to Talk About the Body? the Normative Dimension of Science Studies
    Body and Society 10 (2-3): 205-229. 2004.
    Science studies has often been against the normative dimension of epistemology, which made a naturalistic study of science impossible. But this is not to say that a new type of normativity cannot be detected at work inscience studies. This is especially true in the second wave of studies dealing with the body, which has aimed at criticizing the physicalization of the body without falling into the various traps of a phenomenology simply added to a physical substrate. This article explores the wor…Read more
  •  123
    The Science Wars: A Dialogue
    with Ashraf Noor
    Common Knowledge 8 (1): 71-79. 2002.
  •  15