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  1. The Gatekeepers of Modern Physics: Periodicals and Peer Review in 1920s Britain.Imogen Clarke - 2015 - Isis 106 (1):70-93.
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  • Objectivity in Science: New Perspectives From Science and Technology Studies.Flavia Padovani, Alan Richardson & Jonathan Y. Tsou (eds.) - 2015 - Cham: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, vol. 310. Springer.
    This highly multidisciplinary collection discusses an increasingly important topic among scholars in science and technology studies: objectivity in science. It features eleven essays on scientific objectivity from a variety of perspectives, including philosophy of science, history of science, and feminist philosophy. Topics addressed in the book include the nature and value of scientific objectivity, the history of objectivity, and objectivity in scientific journals and communities. Taken individually, the essays supply new methodological tools for theorizing what is valuable in the pursuit (...)
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  • Introduction: Editorship and the editing of scientific journals, 1750–1950.Aileen Fyfe & Anna Gielas - 2020 - Centaurus 62 (1):5-20.
    Mainly known for its links to the periodical market and radical politics, this article recontextualizes the editorship of William Nicholson (1753–1815) in terms of its roots in the metropolitan natural philosophical circles of the second half of the 18th century as well as its impact on experimenters and men of science after 1797. The article argues that Nicholson's editorship of the Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, and the Arts was a means to expand his philosophical significance among natural philosophers at (...)
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  • Turning tradition into an instrument of research: The editorship of William Nicholson.Anna Gielas - 2020 - Centaurus 62 (1):38-53.
    Mainly known for its links to the periodical market and radical politics, this article recontextualizes the editorship of William Nicholson (1753–1815) in terms of its roots in the metropolitan natural philosophical circles of the second half of the 18th century as well as its impact on experimenters and men of science after 1797. The article argues that Nicholson's editorship of the Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, and the Arts was a means to expand his philosophical significance among natural philosophers at (...)
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  • Natural Knowledge, Inc.: the Royal Society as a metropolitan corporation.Noah Moxham - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (2):249-271.
    This article attempts to think through the logic and distinctiveness of the early Royal Society's position as a metropolitan knowledge community and chartered corporation, and the links between these aspects of its being. Among the knowledge communities of Restoration London it is one of the best known and most studied, but also one of the least typical and in many respects one of the least coherent. It was also quite unlike the chartered corporations of the City of London, exercising almost (...)
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  • Academic writings and the rituals of early modern universities.Gerhard Wiesenfeldt - 1945 - Intellectual History Review 26 (4):447-460.
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  • An experimental ‘Life’ for an experimental life: Richard Waller's biography of Robert Hooke.Noah Moxham - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Science 49 (1):27-51.
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  • ‘Keeping in the race’: physics, publication speed and national publishing strategies in Nature, 1895–1939.Melinda Baldwin - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Science 47 (2):257-279.
    By the onset of the Second World War, the British scientific periodicalNature– specifically,Nature's ‘Letters to the editor’ column – had become a major publication venue for scientists who wished to publish short communications about their latest experimental findings. This paper argues that the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Ernest Rutherford was instrumental in establishing this use of the ‘Letters to the editor’ column in the early twentieth century. Rutherford's contributions setNatureapart from its fellow scientific weeklies in Britain and helped construct a defining (...)
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  • Criticism and the Circulation of News: The Scholarly Press in the Late Seventeenth Century.Thomas Broman - 2013 - History of Science 51 (2):125-150.
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  • From Paratexts to Print Machinery.Benjamin Goh - 2024 - Law and Critique 35 (2):313-335.
    This article seeks to decentre the proprietary author in copyright law by attending to some peripheral matters of Immanuel Kant’s periodical essay, ‘On the Wrongfulness of Reprinting’ (1785), as indices of its medial-material conditions of possibility. We consider not only the epitextual background of the German Enlightenment in which the Berlinische Monatsschrift was produced, but also the peritextual specimens of catchwords, signature marks, and various front matter of Kant’s essay. This medial reading suggests the periodical to be deeply involved in (...)
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