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  1. Mathematics in the archives: deconstructive historiography and the shaping of modern geometry.Nicolas Michel & Ivahn Smadja - 2021 - British Journal for the History of Science 54 (4):423-441.
    This essay explores the research practice of French geometer Michel Chasles, from his 1837 Aperçu historique up to the preparation of his courses on ‘higher geometry’ between 1846 and 1852. It argues that this scientific pursuit was jointly carried out on a historiographical and a mathematical terrain. Epistemic techniques such as the archival search for and comparison of manuscripts, the deconstructive historiography of past geometrical methods, and the epistemologically motivated periodization of the history of mathematics are shown to have played (...)
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  • La mathématique et le pathologique.Klaus Volkert - 2008 - Philosophia Scientiae 12 (2):65-74.
    Nous étudions l’apparition des monstres en mathématiques (comme, par exemple, le monstre dit de Weierstrass — une fonction continue qui n’est différentiable en aucun point) au XIXe siècle. Nous traitons aussi la question : comment peut-on distinguer les mathématiques normales (ou naturelles) des mathématiques pathologiques?
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  • In Accordance with a “More Majestic Order”: The New Math and the Nature of Mathematics at Midcentury.Christopher J. Phillips - 2014 - Isis 105 (3):540-563.
    ABSTRACT The “new math” curriculum, one version of which was developed in the 1950s and 1960s by the School Mathematics Study Group under the auspices of the National Science Foundation, occasioned a great deal of controversy among mathematicians. Well before its rejection by parents and teachers, some mathematicians were vocal critics, decrying the new curriculum because of the way it described the practice and history of the discipline. The nature of mathematics, despite the field’s triumphs in helping to win World (...)
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  • Interactions between social and biological thinking: The case of Lamarck.Snait Gissis - 2009 - Perspectives on Science 17 (3):pp. 237-306.
    Lamarck's perspective on change within the organic world, in particular his conception of "la marche de la nature," , crystallized during the last decade of the 18th century and the early years of the 19th. I argue that it should be viewed as resulting in part from interactions with, and transfers from, the social thought—modes of thinking, ways of conceptualizing, models, metaphors and analogies—of the decades before the French revolution and of the revolutionary decade itself. Moreover, Lamarck's involvement with the (...)
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