Professor of Science, Technology and Society, University of Glasgow
My work has combined scientific practice with studies of science 'from the outside'. My first two degrees were in Physics from Simon Fraser University in Canada and the third was in History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Leeds, UK. I began as a physicist working at national laboratories (Canada's principal particle accelerator facility, its national optics laboratory, and national satellite image analysis centre) and as an R&D manager in Canadian and British engineering firms. One of my instruments was designed for the Space Shuttle; another comprised a measurement network for year-round observations of the aurora borealis in the Canadian arctic, and yet others measured greenhouse gases.
These varied working environments, clients and sponsors provided experience relevant to my subsequent training and research in the history, ethics and sociology of science and technology. I taught both physics and the history and philosophy of science as a two-faculty interdisciplinary Research/Teaching Fellow at the University of Leeds, and was a historian of technology at the University of York before joining the University of Glasgow.
Holograms are no longer the future, but we must not forget them – here's why
Nov 25, 2016 09:17 am UTC| Science
Stereoscopes entertained every Victorian home with their ability to produce three-dimensional pictures. Typewriters and later fax machines were once essential for business practices. Photo printers and video rentals came...