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Biot’s Paper and Arago’s Plates

Isis 94 (3):456-476 (2003)

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  1. The daguerreotype’s first frame: François Arago’s moral economy of instruments.John Tresch - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 38 (2):445-476.
    This paper examines the meanings of the daguerreotype for the astronomer and physicist who introduced it to the world, François Arago. The regime of knowledge production which held sway at the birth of photography implied an alternative view of the moral and political implications of machines from that usually suggested by discussions of ‘mechanization’. Instead of celebrating detachment, instantaneity, transparency and abstraction, Arago understood instruments and human citizens as dynamic mediators which necessarily modify the forces they transmit. His moral economy (...)
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  • Superpositions: Ludwig Mach and Étienne-Jules Marey’s studies in streamline photography.Christoph Hoffmann - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (1):1-11.
    In the 1890s Ludwig Mach employed photography for visualizing streamlines in the emerging field of aerodynamic research. Étienne-Jules Marey developed a similar approach at the turn of the century. The two projects can be related to a number of current discussions on the history of scientific photography. The case of Ludwig Mach demonstrates how the collection of numerical data became both the subject and the challenge of a line of research intimately linked to the capacities of photography. At the end (...)
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