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  1. Science’s Imagined Pasts.Adrian Wilson - 2017 - Isis 108 (4):814-826.
    Science entails history writing: scientists are continuously engaged in creating “imagined pasts” for their own specialisms, both on the small scale of the ubiquitous literature review and on a much broader scale. This aspect of science has been considered in very different ways in decades-old, yet largely neglected, contributions by Thomas S. Kuhn, Augustine Brannigan, and Simon Schaffer. Inspired by these pieces and by the missing dialogue between them, this essay argues that their concealment is itself an instance, on the (...)
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  • A Unique Partnership: William and Lawrence Bragg and the 1915 Nobel Prize in Physics. [REVIEW]John Jenkin - 2001 - Minerva 39 (4):373-392.
    The award of the 1915 Nobel Prize in physics jointly to William Henry Bragg and his elder son, William Lawrence Bragg – `for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of Röntgen rays' – seems to have been largely uncontroversial at the time, butthere are a number of questions that surround the award and the events that followed it that deserve exploration. This paper attempts to address these questions.
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  • Method in History: For and against.G. N. Cantor - 1976 - History of Science 14 (4):265-276.
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