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  1. ‘A treasure of hidden vertues’: the attraction of magnetic marketing.Patricia Fara - 1995 - British Journal for the History of Science 28 (1):5-35.
    When customers like Samuel Pepys visited the shop of Thomas Tuttell, instrument maker to the king, they could purchase a pack of mathematical playing-cards. The seven of spades, reproduced as Figure 1, depicted the diverse connotations of magnets, or loadstones. These cards cost a shilling, and were too expensive for many of the surveyors, navigators and other practitioners shown using Tuttell's instruments. They provide an early example of the products promising both diversion and improvement which were increasingly marketed to polite (...)
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  • Science, technology and ethics at the origins of modern science: the case of Jonathan Swift.Guillermo Boido - 2006 - Scientiae Studia 4 (3):509-516.
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  • The triumphal march of a paradigm: A case study of the popularization of Newtonian science.Marta Fehdr - 1985 - History of Science 23:127-151.
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