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  1. Replicating Mathematical Inventions: Galileo’s Compass, Its Instructions, Its Students.Mario Biagioli - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (3):437-462.
    Questions about how closure is achieved in disputes involving new observational or experimental claims have highlighted the role of bodily knowledge possibly irreducible to written experimental protocols and instructions how to build and operate instruments. This essay asks similar questions about a scenario that is both related and significantly different: the replication of an invention, not of an observation or the instrument through which it produced. Furthermore, the machine considered here—Galileo’s compass or sector—was not a typical industrial invention (like a (...)
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  • Medicine, metals and empire: the survival of a chymical projector in early eighteenth-century London.Koji Yamamoto - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (4):607-637.
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  • On scientific instruments: Introduction to issue 4.Liba Taub - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 40 (4):337-343.
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  • Inventing scientific method: The privilege system as a model for scientific knowledge-production.Marius Buning - 2014 - Intellectual History Review 24 (1):59-70.
    This paper argues that the development of early-modern science was strongly influenced by prevailing legal practices.1 This argument goes back to the work of Barbara Shapiro, who explored in a numb...
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  • Between Imitation and Invention. Inventor Privileges and Technological Progress in the Early Dutch Republic (c. 1585–1625). [REVIEW]Marius Buning - 2014 - Intellectual History Review 24 (3):415-427.
    1. This paper examines the notion of invention within a legal and economic framework. Returning to the early days of the Dutch Republic (c. 1585–1625), it shows how the notion of invention related...
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  • From ciphers to confidentiality: secrecy, openness and priority in science.Mario Biagioli - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Science 45 (2):213-233.
    I make three related claims. First, certain seemingly secretive behaviours displayed by scientists and inventors are expression neither of socio-professional values nor of strategies for the maximization of the economic value of their knowledge. They are, instead, protective responses to unavoidable risks inherent in the process of publication and priority claiming. Scientists and inventors fear being scooped by direct competitors, but have also worried about people who publish their claims or determine their priority: journal editors or referees who may appropriate (...)
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