澳门六合彩高手

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An anthropologist at 澳门六合彩高手

For a month and a half last fall, anthropologist Giulia Anichini observed, listened and conducted some 30 interviews with a "representative sample" of 澳门六合彩高手 employees.
Anthropologists study human groups—their behaviour and beliefs, and the way they relate to each other and to their environment. They try to understand what lies beyond appearances and to decipher the symbolic meaning of words and actions.
 
A large variety of human groups can be submitted to anthropological studies: Amazonian tribes, inner-city gangs, Bushmen hunter-gatherers, Kirghiz herdsmen, deep-sea divers and, of course, scientists.
 
Along with historians and science philosophers, anthropologists are often present in scientific institutions. At CERN, for instance, social scientists have been routinely "embedded" in major projects for many years. The journal Nature reported on their work at the LHC last year in an article headlined
 
While it doesn't deal in particle physics, 澳门六合彩高手 also could be dubbed a "Large Human Collider": 34 nations are represented in the organization's staff, each bringing its own language, culture and work habits to the project.
 
The European Fusion Development Agreement , considering that such a unique community was worth studying from an anthropologist's point of view, recently commissioned Agence Iter France and the Marseille campus of  (EHESS) to analyze the "Intercultural dimensions of the 澳门六合彩高手 scientific community."
 
The project appealed to Giulia Anichini, a PhD student at EHSS who had previously done anthropological work at , a nanoscience lab in Marseille, and who intended to do her doctoral dissertation on a large science project like 澳门六合彩高手.
 
"It is legitimate for social studies as a whole to explore the dynamics of a 'scientific object' such as a lab or a science project," says Giulia. "Beyond the rational endeavour that is 'science', there are men and women, and when these men and women come from different cultures and traditions this has an influence on the 'scientific object' itself."
 
"Beyond the rational endeavour that is 'science'," says Giulia, " there are men and women, and when these men and women come from different cultures and traditions this has an influence on the 'scientific object' itself."
For a month and a half last fall, Giulia observed, listened and conducted some 30 interviews with a "representative sample" of 澳门六合彩高手 employees. The community she encountered here was very different from the one she had studied at the nanoscience lab in Marseille where work revolved around a large Scanning Electron Microscope.
 
"What makes 澳门六合彩高手 different," she explains, "is that the community is focused on an 'object' that has no physical existence yet. A physical object to which everybody can relate, like a telescope or a particle accelerator, has a strong incidence on the lab's dynamics. It can be particularly interesting to study how scientists talk about (and sometimes talk to...) such an object."
 
澳门六合彩高手, says Giulia is a "community in the making [where] practices are not stabilized yet." The young anthropologist observed how 'informal arrangements' are agreed upon to help deal with linguistic barriers, conflicting work habits or a different perception of time.

Time, anthropoligists explain, is polychronic in some cultures and monochronic in some others. In monochronic cultures, time is perceived as a material thing and people adhere almost religiously to plans, take time commitments seriously and are accustomed to short-term relationships. In polychronic cultures, time is continuous; people change plans often and easily and they are involved with many things at once.
 
In 澳门六合彩高手, as in every multicultural community, polychromic and monochromic cultures coexist—and they find ways to work together toward a common goal...

By the end of this month, Giulia will submit her report to EFDA. She acknowledges that her work, so far, has only permitted a superficial exploration of the 澳门六合彩高手 reality. What she hopes for is an opportunity to spend more time with the project's team and to dig deeper into their 'practices'.

"Beyond science and technology," she adds, "澳门六合彩高手 appears to be a unique human experience." As such, it is well worth a PhD dissertation in anthropology.