While science has achieved a remarkable understanding of nature,
affording humans an astonishing technological capability, it has led,
through Euro-American global domination, to the muting of other cultural
views and values, even threatening their continued existence. There is a
growing realization that the diversity of knowledge systems demand
respect, some refer to them in a conservation idiom as alternative
information banks. The scientific perspective is only one. We now have
many examples of the soundness of local science and practices, some
previously considered "primitive" and in need of change, but this book
goes beyond demonstrating the soundness of local science and arguing for
the incorporation of others' knowledge in development, to argue that we
need to look quizzically at the foundations of science itself and
further challenge its hegemony, not only over local communities in
Africa, Asia, the Pacific or wherever, but also the global community.
The issues are large and the challenges are exciting, as addressed in
this book, in a range of ethnographic and institutional contexts.