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  1. Sex in the laboratory: the Family Planning Association and contraceptive science in Britain, 1929–1959.Natasha Szuhan - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Science 51 (3):487-510.
    Scientific and medical contraceptive standards are commonly believed to have begun with the advent of the oral contraceptive pill in the late 1950s. This article explains that in Britain contraceptive standards were imagined and implemented at least two decades earlier by the Family Planning Association, which sought to legitimize contraceptive methods, practice and provision through the foundation of the field of contraceptive science. This article charts the origins of the field, investigating the three methods the association devised and employed to (...)
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  • Natural Histories, Analyses and Experimentation: Three Afterwords.John V. Pickstone - 2011 - History of Science 49 (3):349-374.
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  • Clocks to Computers: A Machine-Based “Big Picture” of the History of Modern Science.Frans van Lunteren - 2016 - Isis 107 (4):762-776.
    Over the last few decades there have been several calls for a “big picture” of the history of science. There is a general need for a concise overview of the rise of modern science, with a clear structure allowing for a rough division into periods. This essay proposes such a scheme, one that is both elementary and comprehensive. It focuses on four machines, which can be seen to have mediated between science and society during successive periods of time: the clock, (...)
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