Jerome Ravetz


Jerome Ravetz is a philosopher of science. He is best known for his books analysing scientific knowledge from a social and ethical perspective, focussing on issues of quality. He is the co-author of the NUSAP notational system and of Post-normal science. He is currently an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society, University of Oxford.

Biography

Ravetz was born in Philadelphia; his grandfather was a Russian-Jewish immigrant and his father a truck driver and trade union organiser. He attended Central High School and Swarthmore College. He came to England in 1950 on a Fulbright Scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied for a Ph.D. in Pure Mathematics under the supervision of A.S. Besicovitch. In 1955 his passport was taken away, as part of the wave of McCarthyism; it was returned in 1958 and in 1961 he became a British citizen. He taught mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania and then at Durham University. In 1957 he moved to Leeds University to join Stephen Toulmin in the establishment of a centre in the History and Philosophy of Science. He stayed at Leeds, eventually becoming a Reader, until taking early retirement in 1983. Since then he has been an independent scholar.
He has visited at Utrecht University, Harvard University, the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of California, Santa Cruz, Fudan University, the University of Texas at Dallas, the Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Luxembourg. Over the years he has worked closely with colleagues at the European Commission Joint Research Centre, Ispra, Italy.
His earliest research, after mathematics, was in the history of the mathematical sciences, with books on Copernicus and Fourier. In 1971, he published the influential book Scientific Knowledge and Its Social Problems. This went through several English language editions, plus German and Japanese translations, and was republished in 1996. This book raises issues of uncertainty and ethics in the social practice of science. It was an early attempt to recast the philosophy of science for the conditions of 'industrialised science' and to shift the philosophy of science from epistemology to the social and ethical aspects of science. In it he proposed a 'critical science' for a new version of the idealism that had characterised science in the pre-industrial age.
In the years around 1970 he was an active member of the British Society for Social Responsibility in Science.
From 1973 to 1976 he was Executive Secretary of the in London, whose founder was the law reformer . He drafted its report on 'The Acceptability of Risks'. From 1977 to 1978, he was a member of the Genetic Manipulation Advisory Group, regulating research in recombinant DNA.
Working with Silvio Funtowicz in Leeds. he created the NUSAP notational system, described in their book Uncertainty and Quality in Science for Policy. This was the stimulus for the development of the 'Guidance' for managing uncertainty, at the Netherlands Environment Agency. They also created the theory of Post-normal science, which applies when 'Facts are uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high and decisions urgent.' A collection of his essays, was also published in 1990. With Zia Sardar he co-authored Cyberfutures: Culture and Politics on the Information Superhighway in 1996. His most recent book is The No nonsense guide to science.
His research continues in two main directions: new trends in the social practice of science; and new approaches to the management of uncertainty. On the former, he has co-authored chapters on 'Science, New Forms of' and 'Peer Review and Quality Control' for the International Encyclopedia of Social and Behavioral Sciences. On the latter he is concerned with the analysis of ignorance and the representation and manipulation of quantitative information where there is 'not even one significant digit'. He has also recently written
on the quality control crisis of science.
He is currently an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society at the University of Oxford. He was interviewed by the Great Transition Initiative's on June 2016. On May 31st, 2019 the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society in Oxford has devoted a to honour his 90th birthday. He published a World View piece on the journal Nature on November 19 2019 entitled ". Together with a group of scholars, Ravetz has contributed to the debate on the COVID-19 pandemic.

Quotes

"The activity of modern natural science has transformed our knowledge and control of the world about us; but in the process it has also transformed itself; and it has created problems that natural science alone cannot solve". Scientific Knowledge and its Social Problems, Oxford 1971, p. 9.
"Wherever there's a system, there's a racket to beat it." Ibidem, p. 295.

Events

Seminar at the , Oxford University, July 30, 2018, hosted by Jerome R. Ravetz with Philip Mirowski and .

Videos

, Post-Normal Science Symposium in Barcelona: Address by Jerome Ravetz, 15 November 2018.
, also available as

Interviews