Science has won. We have never had such fast vaccines, such precise telescopes, or such robust climate models. Yet truth has lost. We live surrounded by technology functioning perfectly while the society utilizing it plunges into distrust, denialism, and polarization. How did we arrive at this paradox where technical efficiency coexists with the bankruptcy of intellectual authority? This book proposes a rigorous archaeology of this crisis. The narrative begins in early twentieth-century Vienna, where philosophers dreamed of a purely logical scientific language free of ambiguity. We follow the collapse of this dream and the descent onto the “Science Wars” battlefield in the 1990s, when physicists and sociologists broke off dialogue and entrenched themselves in hostile positions. The author demonstrates how this academic schism had real and devastating consequences. By exposing scientific production’s social fragilities without offering a new basis for trust, the academy inadvertently provided rhetorical weapons appropriated by lobbyists and “merchants of doubt” to paralyze public debate on climate and health. From Moritz Schlick’s murder on the University of Vienna steps to AlphaFold’s silent triumph on Google’s servers, this book traces Western reason’s dramatic arc. It is essential reading for comprehending why we exchanged the Enlightenment ideal of understanding the world for the pragmatic resignation of merely predicting its results.
| ISBN | 9786502033302 |
| Número de páginas | 341 |
| Edição | 1 (2026) |
| Formato | 16x23 (160x230) |
| Acabamento | Brochura s/ orelha |
| Coloração | Preto e branco |
| Tipo de papel | Offset 80g |
| Idioma | Inglês |
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