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  1. Discovery and justification.Carl R. Kordig - 1978 - Philosophy of Science 45 (1):110-117.
    The distinction between discovery and justification is ambiguous. This obscures the debate over a logic of discovery. For the debate presupposes the distinction. Real discoveries are well established. What is well established is justified. The proper distinctions are three: initial thinking, plausibility, and acceptability. Logic is not essential to initial thinking. We do not need good supporting reasons to initially think of an hypothesis. Initial thoughts need be neither plausible nor acceptable. Logic is essential, as Hanson noted, to both plausibility (...)
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  • The origin of the mutation theory.Hugo De Vries - 1917 - The Monist 27 (3):403 - 410.
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  • 12. On the Relations Between Compositional and Evolutionary Theories.Dudley Shapere - 1974 - In Francisco Jose Ayala & Theodosius Dobzhansky (eds.), Studies in the philosophy of biology: reduction and related problems. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 187.
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  • Logic of discovery and justification in regulatory genetics.Kenneth Schaffner - 1974 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 4 (4):349-385.
    In the above pages I have sketched a history of the genesis and comparative evaluation of the repressor model of genetic regulation of enzyme induction. I have not attempted in this article to carry out an analysis of the more scientifically interesting fully developed Jacob-Monod operon theory of genetic regulations but such an analysis of the operon theory would not, I believe, involve any additional logical or epistemological features than have been discussed above. I have argued that the above account (...)
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  • Charles Darwin's Manuscript of Pangenesis.R. C. Olby - 1963 - British Journal for the History of Science 1 (3):251-263.
    Darwin only published one account of his provisional hypothesis of pangenesis, and that is to be found in chapter xxvii of his bookThe Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, the first edition of which is dated 1868. The absence of any earlier account in Darwin's works has led some to assume that he had recourse to this hypothesis only a short time before the published date of the book containing it, and on the basis of this assumption they have (...)
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