
Where does science end and pseudoscience begin? Princeton historian Gordin's fascinating exploration challenges Karl Popper's falsifiability criterion and reveals how fringe ideas shape mainstream thought. Essential reading in an era where climate denial and anti-vaccination movements blur scientific boundaries.
Michael D. Gordin, author of On the Fringe: Where Science Meets Pseudoscience, is a Rosengarten Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Princeton University. He is a leading authority on the historical interplay between legitimate science and marginalized knowledge systems.
A Harvard-trained historian of science specializing in Russian history and nuclear weapons, Gordin explores how pseudoscience emerges and evolves alongside mainstream scientific paradigms. His acclaimed works include A Well-Ordered Thing (a cultural biography of Dmitrii Mendeleev) and Five Days in August (on the nuclear bombing of Japan), both praised for blending rigorous scholarship with accessible narratives.
A Guggenheim Fellow and member of Germany’s National Academy of Sciences, Gordin has contributed to The Los Angeles Review of Books and appeared on Carnegie Council podcasts. On the Fringe was named a top science book of 2021 by Science News and translated into German, cementing its role in debates about scientific legitimacy.
On the Fringe examines the blurred line between science and pseudoscience, analyzing historical cases like Soviet-era technologies, astrology, and eugenics. Gordin argues that terms like "pseudoscience" lack fixed definitions and are shaped by cultural and political contexts. The book explores how once-respected fields become marginalized and how ideology influences scientific legitimacy.
This book is ideal for readers interested in the history of science, Cold War politics, or the sociology of knowledge. Academics, students, and enthusiasts of science communication will appreciate Gordin’s analysis of how societal forces categorize ideas as "mainstream" or "fringe".
Yes. Gordin’s nuanced exploration challenges assumptions about scientific legitimacy, offering fresh perspectives on historical and modern debates. Its accessible style balances scholarly rigor with engaging case studies, making it valuable for general readers and experts alike.
Gordin discusses vestigial sciences (e.g., astrology), hyperpoliticized projects (Nazi “German science”), and counterestablishment movements (creationism). He also examines Soviet biological weapons programs and the ideological suppression of genetics under Stalin.
The book rejects a universal definition, instead showing how pseudoscience is a fluid label applied to ideas contradicting dominant paradigms. Gordin emphasizes that disciplines like alchemy were once mainstream, while others gain pseudoscientific labels due to political or social pressures.
Vestigial sciences are fields like astrology or phrenology that lost scientific credibility but persist culturally. Gordin highlights how these were once integral to academic study, demonstrating how scientific validity shifts over time.
The book details Soviet achievements in the space race and bioweapons, framed as tools of political ambition. Gordin also analyzes the collapse of USSR scientific institutions and their global impact, emphasizing how state ideology shaped research priorities.
Some reviewers note limited depth on modern pseudoscience (e.g., climate denial) and uneven coverage of topics like ESP. However, these gaps don’t diminish the book’s core analysis of historical cases.
Unlike works focusing on debunking pseudoscience, Gordin’s historical approach reveals how societal power structures define scientific legitimacy. This contrasts with method-centric critiques, offering a unique lens on science’s cultural dimensions.
While focused on historical cases, Gordin’s framework applies to modern issues like anti-vax movements or AI hype. The book underscores how labeling ideas as “pseudoscience” often reflects power dynamics rather than objective truth.
Gordin’s expertise in Soviet history and nuclear science informs his analysis of state-driven research. His prior work on Russian science and Cold War politics enriches the book’s exploration of ideology’s role in shaping scientific discourse.
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Today's pseudoscience might become tomorrow's breakthrough.
Boundaries aren't fixed barriers but dynamic interfaces.
Science is a human endeavor, subject to social forces.
Science's legitimacy is negotiated through social processes.
Peer review reflects existing power structures.
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

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The Earth's continents drift across the planet's surface like massive ships on an invisible ocean. Today, this fact appears in every elementary school textbook. Yet in 1912, when Alfred Wegener proposed this idea, geologists dismissed him as a crackpot. His theory remained scientific heresy for half a century before becoming geology's cornerstone. This transformation reveals something unsettling: the boundary between legitimate science and fringe nonsense isn't a fixed wall but a permeable membrane, constantly shifting as knowledge evolves. What we mock today might revolutionize tomorrow-or remain forever exiled to pseudoscience's graveyard. Understanding how these boundaries form and shift offers a compass for navigating our information-saturated world, where distinguishing breakthrough from bunk has never been more crucial or more difficult.