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  1. An Idiot’s Fugitive Essays on Science: Methods, Criticism, Training, Circumstances.C. Truesdell - 2012 - Springer Verlag.
    When, after the agreeable fatigues of solicitation, Mrs Millamant set out a long bill of conditions subject to which she might by degrees dwindle into a wife, Mirabell offered in return the condition that he might not thereby be beyond measure enlarged into a husband. With age and experience in research come the twin dangers of dwindling into a philosopher of science while being enlarged into a dotard. The philosophy of science, I believe, should not be the preserve of senile (...)
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  • Jacobi and the birth of Lie's theory of groups.Thomas Hawkins - 1991 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 42 (3):187-278.
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  • The Principles of Quantum Mechanics.P. A. M. Dirac - 1936 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 43 (2):5-5.
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  • A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity. The Modern Theories, 1900-1926.Edmund Whittaker - 1954 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 5 (19):261-263.
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  • Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times.M. Kline - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 29 (1):68-87.
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  • “Local–Global”: the first twenty years.Renaud Chorlay - 2011 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 65 (1):1-66.
    This paper investigates how and when pairs of terms such as “local–global” and “im Kleinen–im Grossen” began to be used by mathematicians as explicit reflexive categories. A first phase of automatic search led to the delineation of the relevant corpus, and to the identification of the period from 1898 to 1918 as that of emergence. The emergence appears to have been, from the very start, both transdisciplinary (function theory, calculus of variations, differential geometry) and international, although the AMS-Göttingen connection played (...)
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