nicolaslanglitz.bsky.social
@nicolaslanglitz.bsky.social
My article "Experiments in medicalization" on the Swiss and Australian efforts to enable psychedelic therapies outside of clinical trials but short of market approval has just come out in BioSocieties: www.nicolaslanglitz.de/ewExternalFi...
www.nicolaslanglitz.de
September 6, 2025 at 3:07 PM
Building on the historical work on how #diversity became an epistemic value that I did with Clemente de Althaus, here a more normative take apropos the viewpoint diversity audit that Harvard was asked to conduct: www.chronicle.com/article/we-d...
Opinion | We Don’t Need More Administrators Inspecting Our Ideas
Viewpoint diversity is important, but it can’t be mandated.
www.chronicle.com
May 15, 2025 at 6:39 PM
What ever happened to the anthropology of science? Talia Dan-Cohen and I are taking stock of the field in an Annual Review article. Advance version: www.annualreviews.org/content/jour...
What Ever Happened to the Anthropology of Science? From the Science Wars to the Post-Truth Era | Annual Reviews
The anthropology of science emerged in the 1980s as a critique of science and technocracy, exposing the social construction of scientific facts and their role in reinforcing ideologies such as capitalism, racism, and gender inequality. This project positioned anthropologists as challengers of scientific authority, culminating in the science wars of the 1990s. By the 2000s, the political landscape shifted as climate skeptics appropriated social constructionist arguments. In response, some anthropologists adopted neorealist epistemologies that view scientific facts as constructed but real, enabling collaborations with scientists but also generating new conflicts. This review argues that in the post-truth era, the anthropology of science has struggled to reconcile its critical origins with a defense of scientific authority. These normative agendas aside, we need close-up ethnographic observation of scientific practice more than ever to understand what comes after the “knowledge societies” from which the anthropology of science had been born some 40 years ago.
www.annualreviews.org
May 14, 2025 at 2:48 AM
Today, the National
Endowment for the Humanities terminated their grant for our “Psychedelic Humanties” workshop: “NEH has reasonable cause to terminate your grant in light of the fact that the NEH is repurposing its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the President’s agenda.”
April 3, 2025 at 9:01 PM
An interview with the German podcast provisorisch legal about my work on the psychedelic renaissance: podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/v...
Von psychedelischen Plattitüden, Neuropsychedelia und der Liberalisierung von rechts (mit Nicolas Langlitz)
Podcast-Folge · provisorisch legal - der Drogen-Podcast · 01.04.2025 · 1 Std. 15 Min.
podcasts.apple.com
April 3, 2025 at 8:46 PM
The Psychedelic Humanities Lab’s Minsu Yoo & Sofia Sakopoulos just published “The Birth of the Psychedelic Industry”. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....
The Birth of the Psychedelic Industry: Capitalising on the Psychedelic Renaissance
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
December 30, 2024 at 7:17 PM
HKU is looking to hire a critical medical humanities researcher. I heard they might be interested in sharpening the unit’s profile by attracting more scholars interested in psychedelics, altered states, and/or cultural psychopharmacology (supplementing Gearin’s work). jobs.hku.hk/cw/en/job/50...
HKU Careers
The University of Hong Kong (HKU) offers an intellectually-stimulating and culturally-rich academic environment, with attractive remuneration packages.
jobs.hku.hk
December 18, 2024 at 3:23 PM
Just back from a drug history conference at University of Shanghai focusing on psychedelics. Also visited Sheng Wang’s psychoplastogen lab at Chinese Academy of Sciences. Would be fascinating if there was a Chinese chapter of the Psychedelic Renaissance.
December 11, 2024 at 10:21 AM