SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
The history of science and technology (HST) is a field of history
which examines how humanity's understanding of the natural world
(science) and ability to manipulate it (technology) have changed over
the centuries. This academic discipline also studies the cultural,
economic, and political impacts of scientific innovation.
Histories of science were originally written by practicing and retired scientists, starting primarily with William Whewell, as a way to communicate the virtues of science to the public. In the early 1930s, after a famous paper given by the Soviet historian Boris Hessen,
was focused into looking at the ways in which scientific practices were
allied with the needs and motivations of their context. After World War II,
extensive resources were put into teaching and researching the
discipline, with the hopes that it would help the public better
understand both science and technology as they came to play an
exceedingly prominent role in the world. In the 1960s, especially in
the wake of the work done by Thomas Kuhn,
the discipline began to serve a very different function, and began to
be used as a way to critically examine the scientific enterprise. At
the present time it is often closely aligned with the field of Science studies.