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  1. The STEP (Science and Technology in the European Periphery) Initiative: Attempting to Historicize the Notion of European Science.Kostas Gavroglu - 2012 - Centaurus 54 (4):311-327.
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  • The ingénieur savant, 1800–1830 A Neglected Figure in the History of French Mathematics and Science.I. Grattan-Guinness - 1993 - Science in Context 6 (2):405-433.
    The ArgumentThis paper deals with the achievements of those French mathematicians active in the period 1800–1830 who oriented their work specifically around the needs of engineering and technology. In addition to a review of their achievements, the principal organizations and institutions are noted, as is their importance as sources of employment and influence.The argument is centered on the word ‘neglected“ in the title. A case is made that a mass of work was produced which made considerable impact at the time (...)
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  • Work for the workers: Advances in engineering mechanics and instruction in France, 1800–1830.I. Grattan-Guinness - 1984 - Annals of Science 41 (1):1-33.
    An account is given of the emergence of the concept of work as a basic component of mechanics. It was largely an achievement of engineer savants in France during the Bourbon Restoration , with Navier, Coriolis and Poncelet playing the major roles. Some aspects of the eighteenth-century prehistory are described, and also concurrent developments in French engineering. The principal problem areas were friction, hydraulics, machine performance and ergonomics, and especially in the last context the developments became involved with social and (...)
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  • The rise and decline of france as a scientific centre.Terry N. Clark - 1970 - Minerva 8 (1-4):599-601.
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  • The institutionalization of science: A critical synthesis.Harry Redner - 1987 - Social Epistemology 1 (1):37 – 59.
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  • Popular science periodicals in Paris and London: The emergence of a low scientific culture, 1820–1875.Susan Sheets-Pyenson - 1985 - Annals of Science 42 (6):549-572.
    Efforts to diffuse useful knowledge on the part of dedicated social reformers, enterprising publishers, and vigorous voluntary associations created new forms of popular literature in the urban centres of Paris and London during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Popular science periodicals, especially, embodied the aims of the advocates of cheap literature, by providing ‘improving’ information at prices low enough to reach readers who might otherwise purchase potentially dangerous political tracts. Besides promoting social stability, popular science periodicals served to (...)
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  • Does History of Science Treat of the History of Science? The Case of Mathematics.I. Grattan-Guinness - 1990 - History of Science 28 (2):149-173.
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  • Scientific enterprise and the patronage of research in France 1800–70.Robert Fox - 1973 - Minerva 11 (4):442-473.
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  • Jesuit Scientists and Mongolian Fossils: The French Paleontological Missions in China, 1923–1928.Chris Manias - 2017 - Isis 108 (2):307-332.
    This essay examines the Mission paléontologique française of the 1920s, a series of scientific expeditions into the Ordos Desert in Inner Mongolia in which a team of Jesuit scholar-scientists worked with local collaborators to provide material for the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris. The case study shows that the global and colonial expansion of Western science in the early twentieth century provided space for traditional scientific institutions, such as universalizing metropolitan collections and clerical scholarly networks, to extend their research projects. (...)
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  • Science in the arab middle east.Jacques Waardenburg - 1970 - Minerva 8 (1-4):597-599.
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  • Orthodoxy and innovation in science: The atomist controversy in French chemistry. [REVIEW]Terry Shinn - 1980 - Minerva 18 (4):539-555.
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  • Career-Making in Post-Revolutionary France: the Case of Jean-Baptiste Biot.Eugene Frankel - 1978 - British Journal for the History of Science 11 (1):36-48.
    Science is an occupation as well as an intellectual endeavour. This fact is extremely well known, but its consequences have been little explored by historians of science. Sociologists such as Merton, Hagstrom, and Storer have argued that occupational rewards motivate a scientist to publish and thereby further the intellectual ends of the scientific community. Yet, as I have shown in a recent paper, such rewards can also lead to work which is hasty, superficial, and blindly uncritical of the dominant paradigm. (...)
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