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El. knyga: When Maps Become the World

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Jun-2020
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226674865
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Jun-2020
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226674865

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Map making and, ultimately, map thinking is ubiquitous across literature, cosmology, mathematics, psychology, and genetics. We partition, summarize, organize, and clarify our world via spatialized representations. Our maps and, more generally, our representations seduce and persuade; they build and destroy. They are the ultimate record of empires and of our evolving comprehension of our world.
 
This book is about the promises and perils of map thinking. Maps are purpose-driven abstractions, discarding detail to highlight only particular features of a territory. By preserving certain features at the expense of others, they can be used to reinforce a privileged position.

When Maps Become the World shows us how the scientific theories, models, and concepts we use to intervene in the world function as maps, and explores the consequences of this, both good and bad. We increasingly understand the world around us in terms of models, to the extent that we often take the models for reality. Winther explains how in time, our historical representations in science, in cartography, and in our stories about ourselves replace individual memories and become dominant social narratives—they become reality, and they can remake the world.

Recenzijos

"When Maps Become the World deservedly takes its place alongside some of the great philosophical reflections on the unique alchemy of maps. This immensely rich and deeply learned book is about the power and limitations of maps and map thinking as a way of understanding cartography as well as scientific theory and practice. Moving beyond the established critique of maps, Winther provides a dazzling route for new map thinking in our bewildering digital age. A superb achievement." -- Jerry Brotton, author of A History of the World in Twelve Maps "A tour de force. Philosophers of science have increasingly resorted to analogies with maps and mapping in thinking about the relation of scientific theories and models to the world(s) they are about. Winther interrogates this usage in multiple ways: a historical overview of map-making in the West, a philosophical examination of the assumptions and commitments of map language, and in-depth studies of mapping practices in sciences from cosmology to neuroscience to genetics. Wonderfully enhanced by reproductions of maps from the many domains in which they are used, this book gives welcome philosophical substance to a widely used and increasingly central concept in studies of science." -- Helen Longino, Stanford University "It's only three-hundred pages but When Maps Become the World is a lot of book with a lot of thought-provoking propositions about life and how to live it. Masquerading as a book about maps and science, it's a manual on how to be in the world, a manual on how to live." * Denis Wood, Making Maps: DIY Cartography * "A sound contribution to the transdisciplinary field of map studies. . . . This book succeeds in bringing new  theoretical insights into past cartographic materials and processes, encompassing diverse epochs, practices, and key ideas in map thinking. . . . The inclusive stance of this extremely well-written book is genuine, and the effort to bring together a huge amount of writings about cartography is valuable. From the specific angle of map theory, this book is a particularly welcome contribution that endorses a pluralistic style of thinking within the lively arena of map studies. From the point of view of science, it offers a sophisticated reflection on the generative powers of cartographic theorization." * The Holocene * "Convincingly links cartography and philosophy of science. . . . Winther relies on a careful archaeology of the basic or foundational assumptions lying behind every representation, and on 'counter-mappings': mappings that illustrate a minority or outsider point of view and thus show the contextuality of other maps. He illustrates his approach with examples of mapping in cosmology, brain research, and genetics. In doing so, he impressively shows the limitations the mapping of genes and brain functions have, and in which way 'counter maps' can open up new perspectives. . . . [ The] book is an unorthodox and passionate plea for a diversity of perspectivesof structures, orders, and summariesin cartography, science, and the philosophy of science. And at the same time, a convincing treatment of the tendency to confuse maps with the reality they describe." * Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung * "A valuable contribution to the philosophy of scientific representation. . . . Winther's writing and reasoning is clear and engaging. For the most part, this book is widely accessible to non-expert readers. . . . [ An] excellent book." * History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences * "[ Winther] blends wide-ranging, multidisciplinary perspectives to demonstrate the power of maps, mapping, and the philosophical 'map thinking' that helps explain complex information and relationships through scientific theories and models. Winther's text evaluates the promises, consequences, and perils of map thinking. . . . Winther's provocative, thoughtful treatise expands familiar concepts of cartography. GIS specialists could benefit from his reflections. . . . Highly recommended." * Choice, 2020 Outstanding Academic Title * "An engaging and informative work. . . . I recommend this book to graduate students taking a history and philosophy of geography class, along with anyone else interested in this field." * Cartographic Perspectives * "[ Winther] has engaged fundamentally with mapping and cartography in order to show what significance maps play in all areas of science, how the clarification of spatial relationships helps in the formation of theory and representation of ideas in both the natural sciences and the humanities. . . . He never tires of giving hints to the danger of 'pernicious reification', the always erroneous equalization of a model with reality, regardless of whether it is the Mercator projection, the pictorial flattening of Earth in the atlas, gene-driven evolution or a model of Homo sapiens: The theory is never the Living." * Süddeutsche Zeitung * "Winther writes from a wide-ranging, multidisciplinary perspective to show the power of the map, mapping, and map thinking to organize and understand complex information. In very clear prose, citing a rich literature, he explores the possibilities of mapping, as well as its limitations and hazards. Professionals in geographic information systems who read this book will expand their conception of mapping and see their work as integral to the entire human enterprise; they will reflect more deeply on what they are doing, how they do it, and why; and be encouraged to look further into the philosophical underpinnings of mapping and GIS." -- Jack Dangermond, founder and president, Esri "An intriguing and often brilliant book, When Maps Become the World raises profound, even fundamental philosophical questions about map thinking. The map is considered here as more than simply a scientific model or abstraction but as a kind of metaperspective through which the world has been understood scientifically. This is an important book on how the map can be considered philosophically as a heuristic device that has enabled and constrained the development of scientific rationality." -- Michael Heffernan, University of Nottingham "A valuable contribution to the philosophy of scientific representation." * Springer Nature * "Defining what a map is and how it works is a centuries-old exercise. Winther boldly goes where many have gone before and, after settling on a definition that allows for new directions, he explores how map thinking operates to organize scientific knowledge and guide social change. Not only do maps represent the world we live in, but they also suggest multiple ways to remake it and, hopefully, improve it." * Imago Mundi *

Preface xi
1 Introduction: Why Maps?
1(28)
A History and Philosophy of Map Thinking
4(5)
The Nature of Map Thinking
Elements of Map Thinking-Deep Mapping
Five Hundred Years of Western Mapping
Maps Today
9(6)
Cartography Meets GIS
A Definition Based on Representation-Characterizations Based on Process and Function
Three Maps
15(9)
Waldseemuller's Map
Guaman Poma's Countermap
Van Sant's Ultimate Map?
Conclusion
24(5)
PART 1 PHILOSOPHY
2 Theory Is to World as Map Is to Territory
29(1)
Analogy
30(5)
Three Types of Analogy
Critical Cautions
The Map Analogy
35(17)
A Typology of Map Analogies
Uses of the Map Analogy in Humanistic Inquiry
Assumption Archaeology
52(4)
Conclusion
56(3)
3 From Abstraction to Ontologizing
59(30)
The Abstraction-Ontologizing Account
60(1)
Abstraction
61(20)
Abstraction Stage I Calibration of Units and Coordinates
Abstraction Stage II Data Collection and Management
Abstraction Stage III Generalization
Ontologizing
81(6)
Ontologizing 0 Representation Testing
Ontologizing I Changing the World
Ontologizing II Understanding the World
Ontologizing III Classroom Communication
Conclusion
87(2)
4 Long Live Contextual Objectivity!
89(30)
Pernicious Reification
90(5)
Contextual Objectivity
95(4)
Conformation
The Essential Indexical
A History of the Mercator Projection I: Gerardus Mercator
99(3)
Mercator's Critique of Earlier Projections
Mercator's New Purpose: Navigation
Mercator's Clear Presentation of Latitude and Longitude
Mercator's Awareness of Alternative Projections
A History of the Mercator Projection II: Post Mercator
102(5)
Integration Platforms
107(9)
A Beyond-Mercator Integration Platform: Blocking Pernicious Reification and Seeking Contextual Objectivity
Philosophical Aspects of Integration Platforms
Conclusion
116(3)
5 Projecting Maps into Our Worlds
119(1)
Two Canonical Philosophical Accounts of Representation: Isomorphism and Similarity
120(7)
The Isomorphism Account
The Similarity Account
The Multiple Representations Account
127(14)
Ontologizing
Merely-Seeing-As
Pluralistic Ontologizing
Climate Change and Multiple Representations
Conclusion
141(8)
PART 2 SCIENCE
6 Mapping Space
149(1)
Extreme-Scale Maps in Cosmology
150(9)
The Universe's Baby Portrait
The Universe Growing Up (and Outward)
Cosmic-Scale Maps and the Abstraction-Ontologizing Account
Literal Cartographic Maps in Geology
159(6)
State-Space Maps in Physics and Physical Chemistry
165(4)
Analogous Maps in Mathematics
169(5)
Conclusion
174(3)
7 Mapping Ourselves
177(34)
Migration Maps
180(7)
Arrowized Assumptions
Arrowized Maps
Countermapping Migration
Brain Maps
187(12)
Decompositional Assumptions
Phrenological Maps
The Somatosensory and Motor Homunculi
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
Countermapping the Brain
Statistical Causal Maps
199(9)
Linear Model Assumptions
Correlation and Causation
"Genetic" and "Environmental" Diseases
Path Diagrams as Statistical Causal Maps
When Causal Maps Become the World
Conclusion
208(3)
8 Mapping Genetics
211(32)
Building a Mapping-Genetics Integration Platform
213(2)
Assumptions
Terminology
Map Types
The Linear Genetic Map
215(9)
Linear Genetic Maps of Phenotypic Linkage
Linear Genetic Maps of Nucleotides
Assumptions of the Linear Genetic Map
The Gene Expression Map
224(1)
The Genotype-Phenotype Map
225(2)
The Literal Cartographic Genetic Map
227(2)
The Comparative Genetic Map
229(2)
The Adaptive Landscape Map
231(3)
An Analogous Genetic Map: The Tree of Life
234(5)
Darwin's Hypothesis
Contemporary Phytogenies
Future Extensions: Mapping Genetics as a Paradigmatic Integration Platform
239(4)
9 Map Thinking Science and Philosophy
243(14)
Existence, World Making, and Responsibility
244(5)
Map Thinking Scientific Methodology
249(2)
Map Thinking Philosophical Methodology
251(3)
Assumption Archaeology
Tracking Ethics and Power-Imagining "What If ...?"
An Invitation to Dream
254(3)
Appendix: Cognitive Map Exercise 257(4)
References 261(42)
Index 303
Rasmus Gr nfeldt Winther is a philosopher of science, researcher, writer, educator, diver, and explorer. He is the author of Phylogenetic Inference, Selection Theory, and History of Science: Selected Papers of A.W.F. Edwards with Commentaries.