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  1. The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine and Reform 1626-1660.Charles Webster - 1977 - Studia Leibnitiana 9 (2):285-290.
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  • Dr. Faber and His Celebrated Cordial.Harriet Sampson - 1943 - Isis 34:472-496.
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  • Dr. Faber and His Celebrated Cordial.Harriet Sampson - 1943 - Isis 34 (6):472-496.
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  • Peter Stahl, the first public teacher of chemistry at Oxford.G. H. Turnbull - 1953 - Annals of Science 9 (3):265-270.
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  • Joan Baptista Van Helmont: Reformer of Science and Medicine.Walter Pagel - 1984 - Journal of the History of Biology 17 (2):291-294.
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  • A Free Enquiry into the Vulgarly Received Notion of Nature. [REVIEW]Robert Boyle - 1999 - Dialogue 38 (4):894-895.
    Michael Hunter has done more than any single person since Thomas Birch to make the study of Robert Boyle convenient and enjoyable, and here, ably assisted by Edward B. Davis, he has put us all further in his debt with a compact and readable edition of the philosophically important Free Enquiry into the Notion of Nature.
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  • Sir John Colbatch and Augustan medicine: Experimentalism, character and entrepreneurialism.Harold J. Cook - 1990 - Annals of Science 47 (5):475-505.
    SummaryThe medical career of Sir John Colbatch illuminates some of the ways in which experimental philosophy, social change, and medical entrepreneurialism together helped bring about the end of the old medical regime in England. Colbatch's career in Augustan England depended very much on a growing public culture in which the well-to-do decided matters of intellectual importance for themselves, becoming increasingly free not only from the clerics but from the physicians. In this new world, debates about the fundamental principles of the (...)
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  • Godly Learning. Puritan Attitudes Towards Reason, Learning and Education 1560-1640.John Morgan - 1987 - British Journal of Educational Studies 35 (1):80-81.
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  • Ancients and Moderns. A Study of the Rise of the Scientific Movement in Seventeenth Century England.Richard Foster Jones - 1967 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 18 (3):250-255.
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  • La rationalité de l'alchimie au XVIIe siècle.Bernard Joly, Pierre-Jean Fabre & Jean-Paul Dumont - 1995 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 185 (2):265-268.
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  • Occult qualities and the experimental philosophy: Active principles in pre-Newtonian matter theory.John Henry - 1986 - History of Science 24 (4):335-381.
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  • A redefinition of Boyle's chemistry and corpuscular philosophy.Antonio Clericuzio - 1990 - Annals of Science 47 (6):561-589.
    Summary Robert Boyle did not subordinate chemistry to mechanical philosophy. He was in fact reluctant to explain chemical phenomena by having recourse to the mechanical properties of particles. For him chemistry provided a primary way of penetrating into nature. In his chemical works he employed corpuscles endowed with chemical properties as his explanans. Boyle's chemistry was corpuscular, rather than mechanical. As Boyle's views of seminal principles show, his corpuscular philosophy cannot be described as a purely mechanical theory of matter. Boyle's (...)
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  • The French Paracelsians: The Chemical Challenge to Medical and Scientific Tradition in Early Modern France.A. G. Debus & P. O. Long - 1994 - Annals of Science 51 (1):91-92.
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  • Fire analysis and the elements in the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries.Allen G. Debus - 1967 - Annals of Science 23 (2):127-147.
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  • An Early Version of Boyle's: Sceptical Chymist.Marie Boas - 1954 - Isis 45:153-168.
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  • An Early Version of Boyle's: Sceptical Chymist.Marie Boas - 1954 - Isis 45 (2):153-168.
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