The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming

This textual analysis examines computer simulations as rhetorical objects and acts. In particular, this work examines scientific simulations from organic chemistry and astrophysics in order to expose how rhetorical and social aspects influence the ad hoc decisions (e.g., setting initial parameters,...

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Main Author: Kendall, Aimee Janine
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/24034
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-240342015-09-20T17:22:35ZThe meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programmingKendall, Aimee JanineScientific simulationsRelational meaningAbductive reasoningThis textual analysis examines computer simulations as rhetorical objects and acts. In particular, this work examines scientific simulations from organic chemistry and astrophysics in order to expose how rhetorical and social aspects influence the ad hoc decisions (e.g., setting initial parameters, excluding and adding arbitrary elements, and making other choices) that comprise simulations. Prior works in philosophy, critical theory and technical communication underscore fictional and formal features of simulation. In contrast, this dissertation dissects multiple levels of documents surrounding actual simulations—not only drafts of published articles but also software and code interiors, e-mail and letter correspondence, newsletters and white paper reports—in order to discuss the relational (rather than purely formal) meaning of the simulations. This work also compares simulation to other modes of the scientific imagination—paradox, thought experiments and metaphor, in particular. My findings suggest that simulations hinge upon abductive (rather than deductive or inductive) reasoning and qualify as virtual evidence. Also, while published drafts of simulation articles tidy the ad hoc twists and turns necessary for creating simulations, prior drafts and peripheral documents attest to the fact that organizational affiliations, earlier projects, and rhetorical strategies help establish the scope and meaning of simulation projects. Further, meaning-making takes place well before and long after the article drafting process—in prior incarnations of the work for presentation, in correspondence between article writers and reviewers, and in citations in others’ writing.text2014-04-17T18:55:18Z2014-04-17T18:55:18Z2006-052014-04-17Thesiselectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/24034engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Scientific simulations
Relational meaning
Abductive reasoning
spellingShingle Scientific simulations
Relational meaning
Abductive reasoning
Kendall, Aimee Janine
The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
description This textual analysis examines computer simulations as rhetorical objects and acts. In particular, this work examines scientific simulations from organic chemistry and astrophysics in order to expose how rhetorical and social aspects influence the ad hoc decisions (e.g., setting initial parameters, excluding and adding arbitrary elements, and making other choices) that comprise simulations. Prior works in philosophy, critical theory and technical communication underscore fictional and formal features of simulation. In contrast, this dissertation dissects multiple levels of documents surrounding actual simulations—not only drafts of published articles but also software and code interiors, e-mail and letter correspondence, newsletters and white paper reports—in order to discuss the relational (rather than purely formal) meaning of the simulations. This work also compares simulation to other modes of the scientific imagination—paradox, thought experiments and metaphor, in particular. My findings suggest that simulations hinge upon abductive (rather than deductive or inductive) reasoning and qualify as virtual evidence. Also, while published drafts of simulation articles tidy the ad hoc twists and turns necessary for creating simulations, prior drafts and peripheral documents attest to the fact that organizational affiliations, earlier projects, and rhetorical strategies help establish the scope and meaning of simulation projects. Further, meaning-making takes place well before and long after the article drafting process—in prior incarnations of the work for presentation, in correspondence between article writers and reviewers, and in citations in others’ writing. === text
author Kendall, Aimee Janine
author_facet Kendall, Aimee Janine
author_sort Kendall, Aimee Janine
title The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
title_short The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
title_full The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
title_fullStr The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
title_full_unstemmed The meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
title_sort meaning of computer simulations : rhetorical analyses of ad hoc programming
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/24034
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