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  1. Adaptation of Scientific Knowledge to an Intellectual Environment. Paul Forman's "Weimar Culture, Causality, and Quantum Theory, 1918?1927": Analysis and Criticism. [REVIEW]P. Kraft & P. Kroes - 1984 - Centaurus 27 (1):76-99.
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  • History of Science and its Sociological Reconstructions.Steven Shapin - 1982 - History of Science 20 (3):157-211.
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  • Wer beeinflußte wen? Die Kausalitätskritik der Physik im Kontext der Weimarer Kultur.Gregor Schiemann - 1996 - In Wolfgang Bialas (ed.), Intellektuelle in Weimar. Peter Lang.
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  • After Popper, Kuhn and Feyerabend: Recent Issues in Theories of Scientific Method.Robert Nola & Howard Sankey (eds.) - 2000 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    Some think that issues to do with scientific method are last century's stale debate; Popper was an advocate of methodology, but Kuhn, Feyerabend, and others are alleged to have brought the debate about its status to an end. The papers in this volume show that issues in methodology are still very much alive. Some of the papers reinvestigate issues in the debate over methodology, while others set out new ways in which the debate has developed in the last decade. The (...)
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  • Foundations of social epistemics.Alvin I. Goldman - 1987 - Synthese 73 (1):109 - 144.
    A conception of social epistemology is articulated with links to studies of science and opinion in such disciplines as history, sociology, and political science. The conception is evaluative, though, rather than purely descriptive. Three types of evaluative approaches are examined but rejected: relativism, consensualism, and expertism. A fourth, truth-linked, approach to intellectual evaluation is then advocated: social procedures should be appraised by their propensity to foster true belief. Standards of evaluation in social epistemics would be much the same as those (...)
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  • Sociologie de la science et relativisme.Benjamin Matalon - 1986 - Revue de Synthèse 107 (3):267-290.
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  • Who Wants a Postmodern Physics?Cathryn Carson - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (4):635-655.
    The ArgumentTheorists of science and culture, seeking to explicate the implications of chaos theory, quantum mechanics, or special and general relativity, have drawn parallels to the constellation of intellectual and social phenomena collected in the concept of postmodernism. The notion thereby invoked of a postmodern physics is suggestive and worth exploring. But it remains ungrounded so long as the argument moves in the realm of parallels. Moreover, these discussions prove to be tacitly constrained by a preexisting genre of physicists' own (...)
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  • Trajectories in the History and Historiography of Physics in the Twentieth Century.Richard Staley - 2013 - History of Science 51 (2):151-177.
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  • Forman at forty: New perspectives on “Weimar culture and quantum mechanics”: Cathryn Carson, Alexei Kojevnikov and Helmut Trischler : Weimar culture and quantum mechanics: Selected papers by Paul Forman and contemporary perspectives on the Forman thesis. London: Imperial College Press and World Scientific, 2011, 560pp, £98.00 HB.Suman Seth - 2013 - Metascience 22 (3):567-574.
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  • Kramers and the Forman theses.Hans Radder - 1983 - History of Science 21 (2):165-182.
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  • The development of attitudes to the wave-particle duality of light and quantum theory, 1900–1920.John Hendry - 1980 - Annals of Science 37 (1):59-79.
    (1980). The development of attitudes to the wave-particle duality of light and quantum theory, 1900–1920. Annals of Science: Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 59-79.
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  • Weimar culture and biological theory: A study of Richard Woltereck (1877-1944).Jonathan Harwood - 1996 - History of Science 34 (105):347-377.
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  • Five Tourniquets and a Ship's Bell: The Special Session at the 1931 Congress.Christopher A. J. Chilvers - 2015 - Centaurus 57 (2):61-95.
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  • Gestalt psychology in Weimar culture.Mitchell G. Ash - 1991 - History of the Human Sciences 4 (3):395-415.
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