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  1. Quantifying Characters: Polygenist Anthropologists and the Hardening of Heredity. [REVIEW]Brad D. Hume - 2008 - Journal of the History of Biology 41 (1):119 - 158.
    Scholars studying the history of heredity suggest that during the 19th-century biologists and anthropologists viewed characteristics as a collection of blended qualities passed on from the parents. Many argued that those characteristics could be very much affected by environmental circumstances, which scholars call the inheritance of acquired characteristics or "soft" heredity. According to these accounts, Gregor Mendel reconceived heredity - seeing distinct hereditary units that remain unchanged by the environment. This resulted in particular traits that breed true in succeeding generations, (...)
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  • Species Transformation and Social Reform: The Role of the Will in Jean-Baptiste Lamarck’s Transformist Theory.Caden Testa - 2023 - Journal of the History of Biology 56 (1):125-151.
    Jean-Baptiste Lamarck is well known as a pre-Darwinian proponent of evolution. But much of what has been written on Lamarck, on his ‘Lamarckian’ belief in the inheritance of acquired characters, and on his conception of the role of the will in biological development mischaracterizes his views. Indeed, surprisingly little in-depth analysis has been published regarding his views on human physiology and development. Further, although since Robert M. Young’s signal 1969 essay on Malthus and the evolutionists, Darwin scholars have sought to (...)
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  • How might we map the cultural fields of science? Politics and organisms in restoration France.John V. Pickstone - 1999 - History of Science 37 (117):347-364.
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  • The historical imaginary of social science in post-Revolutionary France: Bonald, Saint-Simon, Comte.W. Jay Reedy - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (1):1-26.
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  • Neuroses of the Stomach.Elizabeth A. Williams - 2007 - Isis 98 (1):54-79.
    In the period 1800–1870, French physicians approached psychic illness (Philippe Pinel’s “neurosis”) within competing “cerebralist” and “visceralist” frameworks. Cerebralism, which dominated the specialty of mental medicine, sought the origins of psychic illness in lesions of the brain and central nervous system. “Visceralism,” upheld by generalists, clung to the view of the ancients that psychic disorder was seated in the abdominal viscera. The distinction enjoyed credibility thanks to widespread acceptance of Xavier Bichat’s “two lives” doctrine, which demarcated functions of the central (...)
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  • Maine de Biran and Gall’s phrenology: the origins of a debate about the localization of mental faculties.Marco Piazza - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (5):866-884.
    In March 1808 at the Institut de France, the German physician Franz Joseph Gall, together with his assistant Johann Gaspar Spurzheim, unveiled his rather controversial doctr...
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  • Essay Review: Science in France: Lamarck, Science and Medicine in France: The Emergence of Experimental Physiology 1790–1855, Death is a Social Disease: Public Health and Political Economy in Early Industrial France, Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France, Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France. [REVIEW]J. V. Pickstone - 1988 - History of Science 26 (2):201-211.
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