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  1. Scientific publishing and the reading of science in nineteenth-century Britain: a historiographical survey and guide to sources.Jonathan R. Topham - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):559-612.
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  • Newton and Newtonianism: an introduction.Scott Mandelbrote - 2004 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 35 (3):415-425.
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  • Publishing and the Classics: Paley’s N atural Theology and the Nineteenth-Century Scientific Canon.Aileen Fyfe - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 33 (4):729-751.
    This article seeks a new way to conceptualise the ‘classic’ work in the history of science, and suggests that the use of publishing history might help avoid the antagonism which surrounded the literary canon wars. It concentrates on the widely acknowledged concept that the key to the classic work is the fact of its being read over a prolonged period of time. Continued reading implies that a work is able to remain relevant to later generations of readers, and, although some (...)
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  • Genius, Method, and Morality: Images of Newton in Britain, 1760–1860.Richard Yeo - 1988 - Science in Context 2 (2):257-284.
    The ArgumentFocusing on the celebrations of Newton and his work, this article investigates the use of the concept of genius and its connection with debates on the methodology of science and the morality of great discoverers. During the period studied, two areas of tension developed. Firstly, eighteenth-century ideas about the relationship between genius and method were challenged by the notion of scientific genius as transcending specifiable rules of method. Secondly, assumptions about the nexus between intellectual and moral virtue were threatened (...)
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  • A Women’s Scientific Society in the West.Margaret C. Jacob & Dorothée Sturkenboom - 2003 - Isis 94 (2):217-252.
    The Natuurkundig Genootschap der Dames , formally established by and for women, met regularly from 1785 to 1881 and sporadically until 1887. It challenges our stereotypes both of women and the physical sciences during the eighteenth century and of the intellectual interests open to women in the early European republics. This essay aims not simply to identify the society and its members but to describe their pursuits and consider what their story adds to the history of Western science. What does (...)
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  • Mogg’s celestial sphere : the construction of polite astronomy.Katie Taylor - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 40 (4):360-371.
    In this paper I discuss a cardboard dissected globe made in 1813 by Edward Mogg, a cartographer and map seller, to instruct children in the principles of astronomy. Since little is known about the maker or the specific object, I draw on evidence beyond the sphere itself to construct an account of how the object might have been used. In particular I address conversation as a key part of astronomical education and examine the way in which the cardboard plates of (...)
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  • History and Philosophy of Science Seminar 4:00 Wednesday, Seminar Room 2 "Fictions for Facts: The Form and Authority of the Scientific Dialogue". [REVIEW]Greg Myers - 1992 - History of Science 30 (3):221-247.
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  • Utility and Audience in Eighteenth-Century Chemistry: Case Studies of William Cullen and Joseph Priestley.J. V. Golinski - 1988 - British Journal for the History of Science 21 (1):1-31.
    Historians of science are less inclined now than they were a few years ago to regard chemistry as having sprung full-grown from the mind of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier. Many of the contours of pre-Lavoisierian chemistry have recently been mapped, its Newtonian and Stahlian theoretical traditions have been delineated, and the degree of coherence enforced on the subject by its didactic role has been argued. In addition, the social prominence and cohesion achieved by chemists in various national contexts, such as France, Scotland (...)
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  • Lectures on natural philosophy in London, 1750–1765: S. C. T. Demainbray (1710–1782) and the ‘Inattention’ of his countrymen. [REVIEW]A. Q. Morton - 1990 - British Journal for the History of Science 23 (4):411-434.
    Over the last forty years several historians have drawn attention to aspects of the activities of lecturers on natural philosophy in Britain in the eighteenth century. Hans and others looked at the part these lecturers played in the development of education, particularly adult education. Musson and Robinson considered the possible connection between the work of the lecturers and the growth of industry, and Inkster and others have explored the relationship between lecturers and the institutions set up to support science, especially (...)
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  • ‘A duty of the greatest moment’: Isaac Newton and the writing of biblical criticism.Scott Mandelbrote - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Science 26 (3):281-302.
    Will Ladislaw's words, which so disillusion the young Dorothea, might also depress the modern interpreter of Newton's theology. Encountering the bulk of Newton's manuscript theology, it is tempting to sympathize with Dorothea's eventual response toThe Key to all Mythologies, and to want nothing of it. The assessment of John Conduitt, Newton's son-in-law and executor, that his ‘relief and amusement was going to some other study, as history, chronology, divinity, and chemistry’ has in the past provided an ample excuse for those (...)
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  • Consumerism and the Rise of Balloons in Europe at the End of the Eighteenth Century.Michael R. Lynn - 2008 - Science in Context 21 (1):73-98.
    ArgumentThe history of ballooning has received considerable attention from historians examining the technological innovations behind it as well as from scholars interested in aeronautical anecdotes concerning launches and disasters. The cultural importance of this new machine, however, remains less fully analyzed. This essay explores one facet of that history through a discussion of the commodification of launches in France and Great Britain. These two countries, which have larger middling classes as well as a higher degree of commercialization in general, provided (...)
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  • Mediated education in early modern travel stories: How travel stories contribute to children’s empirical learning.Feike Dietz - 2019 - Science in Context 32 (2):193-212.
    ArgumentLinking up with recent studies on the experience of space and place in modern youth literature, this article analyzes how the “journey” as a narrative line and motif transformed Dutch early modern travel books for children from classical teaching instruments into explorative knowledge places. In the popular seventeenth-century Glorious and Fortunate Journey to the Holy Land, young readers were invited to travel within the book, which was presented as a place that covers material pages to observe as well as imagined (...)
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