in propria persona

Law + tech + history, from a JD/PhD graduate student in the history of science.

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Stepping stone to Internet privacy: the telegraph

By krisnelson on Jan 25, 2011 in constitution / history / law / privacy / research / science studies / search and seizure / technology / wiretap

There have been four piv­otal tech­nolo­gies that have forced mod­ern American law and soci­ety to re-examine its notions of pri­vacy and confidentiality.

Posted in constitution, history, law, privacy, research, science studies, search and seizure, technology, wiretap | Tagged constitution, Fourth Amendment, history, law, search and seizure, society, technology, telegraph, wiretap | Leave a response


Defamation, SLAPP, and medicine: Doctor's Data, Inc. v. Barrett et al

By krisnelson on Jan 17, 2011 in business / law / science

Doctor’s Data filed a defama­tion law­suit against Quackwatch and Dr. Stephen Barrett. Should this be con­sid­ered a SLAPP law­suit intended only to silence their critics?

Posted in business, law, science | Tagged defamation, First Amendment, free speech, medicine, Quackwatch, science, SLAPP, Stephen Barrett | 2 Responses


Cassirer and the Enlightenment

By krisnelson on Dec 10, 2010 in culture / history / science studies / theory

Cassirer’s work on the Enlightenment is quite unlike many of the other works of sci­ence stud­ies I have worked on over the last cou­ple of years.

Posted in culture, history, science studies, theory | Tagged culture, Dorinda Outram, Enlightenment, France, historiography, Jessica Riskin, law, Mary Terrall, Peter Gay, philosophy, science studies | 2 Responses


The 1971 Supreme Court on WikiLeaks

By krisnelson on Dec 6, 2010 in constitution / government / history / law

In that 1971 case, New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 US 713, the Court ruled against an attempt by the Nixon Administration “to enjoin the New York Times and the Washington Post from pub­lish­ing the con­tents of a clas­si­fied study enti­tled ‘History of U. S. Decision-Making Process on Viet Nam Policy.”

Posted in constitution, government, history, law | Tagged constitution, First Amendment, freedom of speech, law, supreme court | Leave a response


Review of "Changing Fashions in Advocacy: 100 Years of Brief-Writing Advice"

By krisnelson on Dec 4, 2010 in education / history / law / recommendations

Helen A. Anderson of the University of Washington School of Law brings us “Changing Fashions in Advocacy: 100 Years of Brief-Writing Advice.”

Posted in education, history, law, recommendations | Tagged Alfred C. Coxe, Briefs, Helen A. Anderson, law, lawyer, narrative, Ralph Ringwalt, storytelling, University of Washington School of Law | Leave a response


Science and Sociability in Mary Terrall's The Man Who Flattened the Earth: Maupertuis and the Sciences in the Enlightenment

By krisnelson on Nov 24, 2010 in culture / history / science studies / theory

For the enlight­ened of the mid-eighteenth cen­tury, the most fun­da­men­tal aspect of their enlight­en­ment was “socia­bil­ity,” accord­ing to Mary Terrall in The Man Who Flattened the Earth.

Posted in culture, history, science studies, theory | Tagged Dorinda Outram, Enlightenment, Mary Terrall, Maupertuis, science | Leave a response


Five useful blogging tools

By krisnelson on Nov 22, 2010 in blog / recommendations

Looking for some use­ful tools that can help enhance your blog and your blog­ging? Here’s a list of some of my favorites.

Posted in blog, recommendations | Tagged blogging, Disqus, Echo, IntenseDebate, Lijit, LinkWithin, Outbrain, Zemanta | 1 Response


Thinking about theories of historiography

By krisnelson on Nov 18, 2010 in culture / education / history / research / science studies / theory

Recently, I’ve been struck by the sense that what seems to drive his­tory as a pro­fes­sion is not specif­i­cally the inves­ti­ga­tion of new archives, new mate­ri­als, new places, or new times, but rather sim­ply the larger desire to always pur­sue what is new qua new.

Posted in culture, education, history, research, science studies, theory | Tagged archive, Geoff Eley, historiography, history, research, theory, Thomas Kuhn | 1 Response


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