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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2000

Pages: 125-153

Series: The New Synthese Historical Library

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048153909

Full citation:

Matthew Chew, "Politics and patterns of developing indigenous knowledge under Western disciplinary compartmentalization", in: The sociology of philosophical knowledge, Berlin, Springer, 2000

Politics and patterns of developing indigenous knowledge under Western disciplinary compartmentalization

the case of philosophical schools in modern China and Japan

Matthew Chew

pp. 125-153

in: Martin Kusch (ed), The sociology of philosophical knowledge, Berlin, Springer, 2000

Abstract

Since the nineteenth century, knowledge has gradually been categorized as falling within distinct academic disciplines. Key elements in this process have been various forms of compartmentalization: some of these forms are cognitive (e.g. bibliographical classification), and others organizational (e.g. departments in universities). This compartmentalization of knowledge has become a major site of intellectual contestation, legitimizing or marginalizing bodies of knowledge (Collins and Ben-David 1966, Gieryn 1983). This compartmentalization has helped to displace pre-modern Western knowledge and marginalize contemporary cross-disciplinary knowledge (Foucault 1970, Messer-Davidow, Shumway, and Sylvan 1993). However, the ways in which disciplinary compartmentalization has affected indigenous knowledge in non-Western cultures remain largely unexplored.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2000

Pages: 125-153

Series: The New Synthese Historical Library

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048153909

Full citation:

Matthew Chew, "Politics and patterns of developing indigenous knowledge under Western disciplinary compartmentalization", in: The sociology of philosophical knowledge, Berlin, Springer, 2000