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  1. Graphic Understanding: Instruments and Interpretation in Robert Hooke's Micrographia.Michael Aaron Dennis - 1989 - Science in Context 3 (2):309-364.
    The ArugmentThis essay answers a single question: what was Robert Hooke, the Royal Society's curator of experiments, doing in his well-known 1665 work,Micrographia?Hooke was articulating a “universal cure of the mind” capable of bringing about a “reformation in Philosophy,” a change in philosophy's interpretive practices and organization. The work explicated the interpretive and political foundations for a community of optical instrument users coextensive with the struggling Royal Society. Standard observational practices would overcome the problem of using nonstandard instruments, while inherent (...)
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  • The Historiography of ‘Georgian’ Optics.G. N. Cantor - 1978 - History of Science 16 (1):1-21.
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  • Descartes’s Epistemic Commitment to Telescopes and Microscopes.George J. Aulisio - 2019 - Dialogue 58 (3):405-437.
    In the Optics, Descartes claims that telescopes and microscopes lead to morally certain knowledge. It is unclear, however, that Descartes’s expressed confidence in these instruments is warranted. In this article, I show how a limited range of telescope and microscope observations could lead to morally certain knowledge for Descartes, and how observations beyond this range admit of enough reasonable doubt to undermine moral certainty. I also explain moral certainty as a form of knowledge in Descartes’s scientific practices, his epistemic commitment (...)
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  • Essay Review: The Apparatus of Science: The Apparatus of Science at Harvard 1766–1800. Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard UniversityThe Apparatus of Science at Harvard 1766–1800. Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard UniversityWheatlandDavid P. assisted by CarsonBarbara . Pp. xii + 204. £9.50. [REVIEW]G. L'E. Turner - 1970 - History of Science 9 (1):129-138.
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  • A case study in cultural collision: Scientific apparatus in the Macartney embassy to China, 1793.J. L. Cranmer-Byng & Trevor H. Levere - 1981 - Annals of Science 38 (5):503-525.
    (1981). A case study in cultural collision: Scientific apparatus in the Macartney embassy to China, 1793. Annals of Science: Vol. 38, No. 5, pp. 503-525.
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  • The history of histology: a brief survey of sources.Brian Bracegirdle - 1977 - History of Science 15 (2):77-101.
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