The history of science traditionally focuses on specific time periods or on scientists that made important discoveries. The research presented in this video by JÜRGEN RENN broadens the perspective and looks at the history of knowledge more generally. With the goal to investigate how knowledge evolves historically the researchers looked at it across time periods and disciplinary boundaries. By tracing three dimensions of knowledge, the cognitive, the material and the social dimension, they detect how each of them influences knowledge evolution. Among others they explain that cognitive structures are being formed by concrete practices and how the carriers of knowledge, be it books or digital media, influence the organization of knowledge and its further evolution.
      
  
   
  
  
    
      
  
    
      DOI:    
                  https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB10204
               
  
   
  
  
  
            Researcher
        
      
            
      
            Jürgen Renn is Director of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and Honorary Professor at Humboldt University and Free University, Berlin. He is a member of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina and affiliated with various international institutions, including Boston University. 
With a background in physics and mathematics, Renn is a leading researcher in the changing systems of scientific thought and physical knowledge. In his current research, Renn is particularly interested in looking at how different disciplines of knowledge production have contributed to the evolution of knowledge. Further, he seeks to dissect how this might differ under the influence of new media and across cultures. Beyond academic research, Renn has been involved in the Digital Humanities and Open Access Movement, as well as in drafting of the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities. 
      
  
 
      
  
   
  
  
            Institution
        
      
      
              
      
              
      
      
        
        
            The Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology (MPI-GEA) focuses on the interrelationships between natural and human-made systems, looking into the deep past and distant future to examine how humanity has driven the emergence of the Anthropocene – the geological period in which human activities began significantly impacting our planet’s climate and ecosystems – and how we can still positively influence its course.
The transdisciplinary research at MPI-GEA will bring together research areas represented by all three scientific sections of the MPG: Biology & Medicine; Chemistry, Physics and Technology; and Human Sciences. Corresponding inter- and transdisciplinary research projects concern, for example, planetary urbanisation, the global food system, and global material, energy and information flows.
 
      
        
          Show more
          
        
       
     
    
  
  
 
           
  
  
   
  
  
            Original publication
        
      
      
              
      
      
The Globalization of Knowledge in History
      
        Renn Jürgen
      
      
      Published in 2012
    
 
    
  
 
           
  
  
   
  
  
      
  
  
            Reading recommendations
        
      
      
              
      
      
Das Anthropozän. Zum Stand der Dinge
      
        Renn Jürgen and Bernd Scherer
      
      
      Published in 2015
    
 
    
  
 
              
      
      
Extended Evolution: A Conceptual Framework for Integrating Regulatory Networks and Niche Construction
      
        Renn Jürgen and Laubichler Manfred D.
      
      
            Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution
      
      Published in 2015
    
 
    
  
 
              
      
      
Wissenschaftliche Philosophie, moderne Wissenschaft und historische Epistemologie. Albert Einstein, Ludwik Fleck und Moritz Schlick im Ringen um die wissenschaftliche Rationalität
      
        Engler Fynn Ole and Jürgen Renn
      
      
      Published in 0
    
 
    
  
 
              
      
      
Extended Evolution and the History of Knowledge
      
        Renn Jürgen and Laubichler Manfred D.
      
      
            Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook
      
      Published in 2015
    
 
    
  
 
              
      
      
Netzwerke als Wissensspeicher
      
        Renn Jürgen, Laubichler Manfred D., Wintergrün Dirk, Roberto Lalli and Matteo Valleriani
      
      
            Die Zukunft der Wissensspeicher: Forschen, Sammeln und Vermitteln im 21. Jahrhundert
      
      Published in 2016
    
 
    
  
 
           
  
  
      Show more