Abstract
This paper engages with the debate over SSK's normative rôle (and over the moral and political responsibilities of the SSK analyst) by utilizing a `sociology of monsters' framework to criticize Collins' insistence on the methodological and political necessity of neutrality, and his associated principles of compartmentalization and alternation. The advantages of viewing the analyst as an exemplary monster — as marginal to, or simultaneously inhabiting, a number of intersecting social worlds — are explored through a discussion of my attempts to draw on my contextualized SSK analysis of the vitamin C and cancer controversy, to inform policy recommendations intended to address asymmetries of power in the conduct and evaluation of clinical trials.
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