Our group focused on overlapping histories of the sciences of nature and culture at the turn of the twentieth century, a time when the human senses became central objects of investigation for anthropologists, linguists, physiologists, psychologists, technicians, and instrument makers. We explored scientific attempts to produce knowledge through and about the senses as a way of restoring authentic continuities among disciplinary entities in flux.

Sciences of the Senses Working Group

  • “Color terminology, sensory stimuli, and the semantics of the questionnaire,” Intellectual History Review 32 (3): 575-598. [DOI]

  • “Visual Formalisms in Comparative-Historical Linguistics,” Form and Formalism in Linguistics, James McElvenny Ed., Language Science Press, 1-33. [Link]

Previous
Previous

Labor in Science

Next
Next

Knowing Universals