S. Barry Barnes


S. Barry Barnes was Professor of Sociology at the University of Exeter.
Barnes worked at the 'Science Studies Unit' at the University of Edinburgh with David Bloor from the 1970s through the early 1990s, where they developed the strong programme in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge. He moved to the sociology department in Exeter in 1992. Barnes is known for his naturalistic approach to science, a view elaborated in his book Scientific Knowledge and Sociological Theory. He advocated a post-Kuhnian approach to scientific knowledge, and suggested that philosophers, historians and other researchers study scientific practice in a variety of fields as cultural traditions whose development could be given causal explanations. In this view conceptual change in normal science is a process unfolding through expert debate and negotiation. This latter perspective was developed in T. S. Kuhn and Social Science.

Main works

Scientific Knowledge and Sociological Theory, London; Boston : Routledge and K. Paul, 1974. Interests and the growth of knowledge, London; Boston : Routledge and K. Paul, 1977.

Selected articles

On the Conventional Character of Knowledge and Cognition in: Philosophy of the Social Sciences 11/3, 1981, pp. 303–333-Relativism, Rationalism and the Sociology of Knowledge in: Hollis, M./Lukes, S. : Rationality and Relativism, Cambridge, MIT Press, 1982, pp. 21–47. On the Extensions of Concepts and the Growth of Knowledge in: Sociological Review 30/1, 1982, pp. 23–45.Relativism as a Completion of the Scientific Project in: Schantz, R./Seidel, M. : The Problem of Relativism in the Sociology of Knowledge, Frankfurt, ontos, 2011, pp. 23–39.