Scientific Discourse in Sociohistorical Context: The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1675-1975 (Rhetoric, Knowledge, and Society Series) 1st edition by Atkinson, Dwight (1998) Paperback
Scientific Discourse in Sociohistorical Context represents the intersection of knowledge and method, examined from the perspectives of three distinct linguistics, rhetoric/composition, and history. Herein, Dwight Atkinson describes the written language and rhetoric of the Royal Society of London, based on his analysis of its affiliated journal, The Philosophical Transactions, starting with the 17th-century advent of modern empirical science and continuing through to the present day. Atkinson adopts two independent approaches to the analysis of written discourse from the fields of linguistics and rhetoric/composition, and then integrates and interprets his findings in light of the history of the Royal Society and British science. The work presented here reinforces how deep historical examinations of linguistic and rhetorical practices have direct bearing on how and what scholars read and write now. Most significant, this volume demonstrates how these historical activities need to inform current teaching of and thinking about language.
Atkinson uses a multimodal approach to examine how science writing changed over a 300 year span of time. His rhetorical and linguistic analyses complement one another very well, and he gives both a solid socio-historical grounding that helps explain not only how science writing changed, but why.