Tomiko Yamaguchi 山口富子 and Masato Fukushima 福島真人, eds., Yosoku ga tsukuru shakai: “Kagaku no kotoba” no tsukawarekata 予測がつくる社会: 「科学の言葉」の使われ方 [Simulation, Prediction, and Society: The Politics of Forecasting]

Volume 15, Issue 1

While foreseeing before acting is a human attribute that has existed down the ages, it is particularly characteristic of our contemporary society to make use of science and technology to grasp the future. More than others, East Asian societies, replete with such forecasts as "five-year plans" and "technological roadmaps."* whether public or private sector, may have a strong tendency to act based on seemingly scientific and objective predictions. Sinnilation, Prediction, and Society: The Politics of Forecasting, edited by two Japanese STS scholars, Tomiko Yamaguchi and Masato Fukushima, is an ambitious collection of ten treatises addressing the complex and multifaceted interplay of predictions and societies. Framing predicting and forecasting activities as inferring the future with an emphasis on scientific and quantitative evidence, all the chapters are imbued with the following two research questions, refilecting the editors' core expertise:

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