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  1. 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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  • Newton on the beach: The information order of Principia mathematica.Simon Schaffer - 2009 - History of Science 47 (3):243-276.
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  • Essay Review: Science in the Enlightenment: Science and the Enlightenment.Jan V. Golinski - 1986 - History of Science 24 (4):411-424.
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  • The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society.Jürgen Habermas & Thomas Burger - 1994 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 27 (1):70-76.
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  • Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World.Londa Schiebinger - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (1):203-205.
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  • Newton for ladies: gentility, gender and radical culture.Massimo Mazzotti - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Science 37 (2):119-146.
    Francesco Algarotti's Newtonianism for Ladies , a series of lively dialogues on optics, was a landmark in the popularization of Newtonian philosophy. In this essay I shall explore Algarotti's sociocultural world, his aims and ambitions, and the meaning he attached to his own work. In particular I shall focus on Algarotti's self-promotional strategies, his deployment of gendered images and his use of popular philosophy within the broader cultural and experimental campaign for the success of Newtonianism. Finally, I shall suggest a (...)
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  • Visions of empire.David Philip Miller, Peter H. Reill & J. F. M. Cannon - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (3):321-321.
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  • Émilie Du Ch'telet and the Gendering of Science.Mary Terrall - 1995 - History of Science 33 (3):283-310.
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  • Other centres of calculation, or, where the Royal Society didn't count: commerce, coffee-houses and natural philosophy in early modern London.Larry Stewart - 1999 - British Journal for the History of Science 32 (2):133-153.
    Wee people at London, are so humbly immersd in slavish business, & taken up wth providing for a wretched Carkasse; yt there's nothing almost, but what is grosse & sensuall to be gotten from us. If a bright thought springs up any time here, ye Mists & Foggs extinguish it again presently, & leaves us no more, yn only ye pain, of seeing it die & perish away from us. Humphrey Ditton to Roger Cotes, ca. 1703THE CALCULUS OF ACCOMPLISHMENTDuring the (...)
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  • The Historiography of ‘Georgian’ Optics.G. N. Cantor - 1978 - History of Science 16 (1):1-21.
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