{"title":"桥梁建筑结构","authors":"W. McCarty","doi":"10.1080/03080188.2022.2031659","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Readers will be aware that ISR publishes both unsolicited submissions and thematic collections. At the last meeting of the Editorial Board, with ISR’s criteria for interdisciplinary research in discussion, one of the members asked what unit is used to determine whether a submission is interdisciplinary, and so whether it qualifies for review. This question proved fruitful, as it raised the matter of the journal’s structure, or I should say, structures, according to which answering the question varies. At the meeting, I responded with a straightforward division into unsolicited submissions and contributions to guest-edited, thematic collections. Pondering further, other interesting problems arise. But first the criteria. For an individual, unsolicited submission, we look for an approach to its research question that attempts to find or negotiate common ground between the author’s native discipline (rarely, disciplines) and at least one other. Merely poaching a technique or result from one field and applying it to a question in another is not merely insufficient but acts on the wrong idea of interdisciplinary research. In other words, interdisciplinary research is crosscultural: it seeks common ground between different intellectual cultures, crucially not assuming but making visible the different assumptions inherent to them. The structure of a thematic issue varies but usually fits one of three kinds. It may be a relatively un-orchestrated collection from diverse perspectives, the theme brought out and discussed by the guest-editor’s initial essay. The next issue, The continuous in motion: Music and/as science, is an example. For the second kind, contributors from different disciplines or specialisms are asked to comment on an essay written beforehand by a senior scholar, who may then reply in an afterword. For the third, contributors respond to the interdisciplinary work of such a scholar (but not in the manner of a Festschrift). Examples of these three kinds are to be found in issues of ISR from the last dozen or so years. The structures I describe, that is, were not invented beforehand but came from proposals, or in at least one case, from an explicitly interdisciplinary lecture series unified by its theme. The problems I’ve called ‘interesting’ have to do precisely with that common ground, or as Marilyn Strathern put it in the title of a book, Commons and Borderlands: Working Papers on Interdisciplinarity, Accountability and the Flow of Knowledge (2004). Three painful truths: professional reward for genuinely interdisciplinary research is rare, understanding of what it entails hard to come by and doing it well exceedingly difficult. Once you eliminate the imperial panoptic illusion, as Stanley Fish instructed (1989) – that from a neutral stance all disciplines can be contemplated and drawn from at will – you are faced with the job of bridge-building, of ‘becoming interdisciplinary’, as I wrote some years ago (2016a, citing excellent writings on the subject). I use the participial form here for two reasons. The first is that intellectual growth is never completed, only continued or abandoned. The second (with an eye to the resources we now have, literally at our fingertips) is that old ways have been shoved aside by new means. Historian Roy Rosenzweig called this the problem of abundance (2011), which is not just a matter of volume but also of use: how fairly to sample and be understood as doing that? 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At the meeting, I responded with a straightforward division into unsolicited submissions and contributions to guest-edited, thematic collections. Pondering further, other interesting problems arise. But first the criteria. For an individual, unsolicited submission, we look for an approach to its research question that attempts to find or negotiate common ground between the author’s native discipline (rarely, disciplines) and at least one other. Merely poaching a technique or result from one field and applying it to a question in another is not merely insufficient but acts on the wrong idea of interdisciplinary research. In other words, interdisciplinary research is crosscultural: it seeks common ground between different intellectual cultures, crucially not assuming but making visible the different assumptions inherent to them. The structure of a thematic issue varies but usually fits one of three kinds. It may be a relatively un-orchestrated collection from diverse perspectives, the theme brought out and discussed by the guest-editor’s initial essay. The next issue, The continuous in motion: Music and/as science, is an example. For the second kind, contributors from different disciplines or specialisms are asked to comment on an essay written beforehand by a senior scholar, who may then reply in an afterword. For the third, contributors respond to the interdisciplinary work of such a scholar (but not in the manner of a Festschrift). Examples of these three kinds are to be found in issues of ISR from the last dozen or so years. The structures I describe, that is, were not invented beforehand but came from proposals, or in at least one case, from an explicitly interdisciplinary lecture series unified by its theme. The problems I’ve called ‘interesting’ have to do precisely with that common ground, or as Marilyn Strathern put it in the title of a book, Commons and Borderlands: Working Papers on Interdisciplinarity, Accountability and the Flow of Knowledge (2004). Three painful truths: professional reward for genuinely interdisciplinary research is rare, understanding of what it entails hard to come by and doing it well exceedingly difficult. Once you eliminate the imperial panoptic illusion, as Stanley Fish instructed (1989) – that from a neutral stance all disciplines can be contemplated and drawn from at will – you are faced with the job of bridge-building, of ‘becoming interdisciplinary’, as I wrote some years ago (2016a, citing excellent writings on the subject). I use the participial form here for two reasons. The first is that intellectual growth is never completed, only continued or abandoned. The second (with an eye to the resources we now have, literally at our fingertips) is that old ways have been shoved aside by new means. Historian Roy Rosenzweig called this the problem of abundance (2011), which is not just a matter of volume but also of use: how fairly to sample and be understood as doing that? 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引用次数: 0
摘要
读者将会意识到,ISR出版了未经请求的投稿和主题合集。在编辑委员会的上次会议上,在讨论ISR的跨学科研究标准时,一位成员问用什么单位来确定一篇论文是否跨学科,从而确定它是否有资格进行审查。这个问题被证明是有成效的,因为它提出了杂志结构的问题,或者我应该说,结构,根据回答问题的不同而不同。在会议上,我直截了当地将其分为主动提交的稿件和嘉宾编辑的专题文集。进一步思考,还会出现其他有趣的问题。但首先是标准。对于一个单独的,未经请求的提交,我们寻找一种方法来解决其研究问题,试图在作者的原生学科(很少,学科)和至少一个其他学科之间找到或协商共同点。仅仅从一个领域窃取技术或成果并将其应用于另一个领域的问题不仅是不够的,而且是对跨学科研究的错误观念的行为。换句话说,跨学科研究是跨文化的:它在不同的智力文化之间寻找共同点,关键是不假设而是使它们固有的不同假设可见。主题问题的结构各不相同,但通常符合三种类型之一。这可能是一个从不同角度出发的相对松散的合集,这个主题是由客座编辑最初的文章提出和讨论的。下一期《连续运动:音乐和/作为科学》就是一个例子。对于第二种,来自不同学科或专业的投稿人被要求对一位资深学者事先写的文章进行评论,然后这位学者可能会在后记中回复。对于第三种,贡献者对这样一位学者的跨学科工作做出回应(但不是以一种方式)。这三种类型的例子可以在过去十几年左右的ISR问题中找到。我所描述的结构,也就是说,不是事先发明的,而是来自建议,或者至少在一个案例中,来自一个明确的跨学科讲座系列,由其主题统一。我称之为“有趣”的问题恰恰与这种共同基础有关,或者正如玛丽莲·斯特拉森(Marilyn Strathern)在2004年出版的一本书《公地与边疆:跨学科、问责制和知识流动的工作论文》(Working Papers on interdisciplinary, Accountability and Flow of Knowledge)中所说。三个令人痛苦的事实:真正的跨学科研究很少得到专业奖励,很难理解它需要什么,而且把它做好极其困难。一旦你像斯坦利·费什(Stanley Fish, 1989)所指示的那样——从中立的立场出发,所有学科都可以被随意地思考和借鉴——消除了帝国全景错觉,你就面临着桥梁建设的工作,“成为跨学科”的工作,正如我几年前写的那样(2016a,引用了关于这个主题的优秀著作)。我在这里使用分词形式有两个原因。第一,智力的增长永远不会完成,只有继续或放弃。第二点(考虑到我们现在拥有的资源,实际上是触手可及的)是,旧的方式已经被新的方式所取代。历史学家罗伊·罗森茨威格(Roy Rosenzweig)将其称为“丰富问题”(2011),这不仅是数量的问题,也是使用的问题:如何公平地取样并被理解为这样做?就在我写博士论文的时候
Readers will be aware that ISR publishes both unsolicited submissions and thematic collections. At the last meeting of the Editorial Board, with ISR’s criteria for interdisciplinary research in discussion, one of the members asked what unit is used to determine whether a submission is interdisciplinary, and so whether it qualifies for review. This question proved fruitful, as it raised the matter of the journal’s structure, or I should say, structures, according to which answering the question varies. At the meeting, I responded with a straightforward division into unsolicited submissions and contributions to guest-edited, thematic collections. Pondering further, other interesting problems arise. But first the criteria. For an individual, unsolicited submission, we look for an approach to its research question that attempts to find or negotiate common ground between the author’s native discipline (rarely, disciplines) and at least one other. Merely poaching a technique or result from one field and applying it to a question in another is not merely insufficient but acts on the wrong idea of interdisciplinary research. In other words, interdisciplinary research is crosscultural: it seeks common ground between different intellectual cultures, crucially not assuming but making visible the different assumptions inherent to them. The structure of a thematic issue varies but usually fits one of three kinds. It may be a relatively un-orchestrated collection from diverse perspectives, the theme brought out and discussed by the guest-editor’s initial essay. The next issue, The continuous in motion: Music and/as science, is an example. For the second kind, contributors from different disciplines or specialisms are asked to comment on an essay written beforehand by a senior scholar, who may then reply in an afterword. For the third, contributors respond to the interdisciplinary work of such a scholar (but not in the manner of a Festschrift). Examples of these three kinds are to be found in issues of ISR from the last dozen or so years. The structures I describe, that is, were not invented beforehand but came from proposals, or in at least one case, from an explicitly interdisciplinary lecture series unified by its theme. The problems I’ve called ‘interesting’ have to do precisely with that common ground, or as Marilyn Strathern put it in the title of a book, Commons and Borderlands: Working Papers on Interdisciplinarity, Accountability and the Flow of Knowledge (2004). Three painful truths: professional reward for genuinely interdisciplinary research is rare, understanding of what it entails hard to come by and doing it well exceedingly difficult. Once you eliminate the imperial panoptic illusion, as Stanley Fish instructed (1989) – that from a neutral stance all disciplines can be contemplated and drawn from at will – you are faced with the job of bridge-building, of ‘becoming interdisciplinary’, as I wrote some years ago (2016a, citing excellent writings on the subject). I use the participial form here for two reasons. The first is that intellectual growth is never completed, only continued or abandoned. The second (with an eye to the resources we now have, literally at our fingertips) is that old ways have been shoved aside by new means. Historian Roy Rosenzweig called this the problem of abundance (2011), which is not just a matter of volume but also of use: how fairly to sample and be understood as doing that? Even as I was writing my doctoral
期刊介绍:
Interdisciplinary Science Reviews is a quarterly journal that aims to explore the social, philosophical and historical interrelations of the natural sciences, engineering, mathematics, medicine and technology with the social sciences, humanities and arts.