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  1. The House of Experiment in Seventeenth-Century England.Steven Shapin - 1988 - Isis 79 (3):373-404.
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  • (1 other version)The death of nature.Carolyn Merchant - forthcoming - Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology.
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  • Precision measurement and the genesis of physics teaching laboratories in Victorian Britain.Graeme Gooday - 1990 - British Journal for the History of Science 23 (1):25-51.
    The appearance and proliferation of physics laboratories in the academic institutions of Britain between 1865 and 1885 is an established feature of Victorian science. However, neither of the two existing modern accounts of this development have adequately documented the predominant function of these early physics laboratories as centres for theteachingof physics, characteristically stressing instead the exceptional cases of the research laboratories at Glasgow and Cambridge. Hence these accounts have attempted to explain, somewhat misleadingly, the genesis of these laboratories purely by (...)
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  • A History of Microtechnique.Brian Bracegirdle - 1981 - Journal of the History of Biology 14 (2):355-355.
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  • Robert Warington and the Moral Economy of the Aquarium.Christopher Hamlin - 1986 - Journal of the History of Biology 19 (1):131 - 153.
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  • ‘Biology’ in the Life Sciences: A Historiographical Contribution.Joseph A. Caron - 1988 - History of Science 26 (3):223-268.
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  • A Profession Of Discovery: Physiology in nineteenth-century history.John V. Pickstone - 1990 - British Journal for the History of Science 23 (2):207-216.
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  • Centers and peripheries: The development of British physiology, 1870?1914.Stella V. F. Butler - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (3):473-500.
    By 1910 the Cambridge University physiology department had become the kernel of British physiology. Between 1909 and 1914 an astonishing number of young and talented scientists passed through the laboratory. The University College department was also a stimulating place of study under the dynamic leadership of Ernest Starling.I have argued that the reasons for this metropolitan axis within British physiology lie with the social structure of late-Victorian and Edwardian higher education. Cambridge, Oxford, and University College London were national institutions attracting (...)
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