David Ludwig
@davidludwig.bsky.social
Philosopher of science, mostly busy with transdisciplinary action research on environment/food/society. Assoc prof at Wageningen University, Netherlands. More here: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=LCzGlYMAAAAJ&hl=en
Yay, welcome on board! Added you :)
October 20, 2025 at 10:23 AM
Yay, welcome on board! Added you :)
Awww, thanks! I feel it's all still quite clumsy and I'm mostly confused myself - but yeah: fun times experimenting with "doing philosophy differently" :)
April 11, 2025 at 1:00 PM
Awww, thanks! I feel it's all still quite clumsy and I'm mostly confused myself - but yeah: fun times experimenting with "doing philosophy differently" :)
This looks great - thanks for sharing! I just ordered the book for our library, and looking forward to reading it
March 25, 2025 at 6:48 PM
This looks great - thanks for sharing! I just ordered the book for our library, and looking forward to reading it
The cited papers/books by @lastpositivist.bsky.social @kylewhyte.bsky.social @gscoulthard.bsky.social & @olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social have been helpful in shaping my thoughts on this - thanks :)
March 25, 2025 at 3:09 PM
The cited papers/books by @lastpositivist.bsky.social @kylewhyte.bsky.social @gscoulthard.bsky.social & @olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social have been helpful in shaping my thoughts on this - thanks :)
you're already on the list :)
February 3, 2025 at 3:11 PM
you're already on the list :)
Agree - I didn't mean to suggest that current funding priorities are in the public interest. They are often evidently not. What can be disentangled & quantified though: whether public funding priorities change or whether they disappear in a privatized model of commodified research. Guess we'll see.
January 24, 2025 at 8:49 AM
Agree - I didn't mean to suggest that current funding priorities are in the public interest. They are often evidently not. What can be disentangled & quantified though: whether public funding priorities change or whether they disappear in a privatized model of commodified research. Guess we'll see.
Agree with everything in the thread but the issue of the day seems less about public control of scientific priorities but about the eradication of public interest science in a vision of fully commodified research?
January 24, 2025 at 8:02 AM
Agree with everything in the thread but the issue of the day seems less about public control of scientific priorities but about the eradication of public interest science in a vision of fully commodified research?