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  1. Science as Receptor of Technology: Paul Ehrlich and the Synthetic Dyestuffs Industry.Anthony S. Travis - 1989 - Science in Context 3 (2):383-408.
    The ArgumentIn Germany during the 1870s and 1880s a number of important scientific innovations in chemistry and biology emerged that were linked to advances in the new technology of synthetic dyestuffs. In particular, the rapid development of classical organic chemistry was a consequence of programs in which chemists devised new theories and experimental strategies that were applicable to the processes and products of the burgeoning dye factories. Thereafter, the novel products became the means to examine and measure biological systems. This (...)
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  • Bazillen, Krankheit und Krieg Bakteriologie und politische Sprache im deutschen Kaiserreich.Christoph Gradmann - 1996 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 19 (2-3):81-94.
    The text analyses metaphors of bacteriology which were extensively used in Germany during the era of William II. These display – in a vivid exchange with the scientific concepts of the age – a specific popular understanding of disease based on bacteriology. Disease is essentially seen as a war of physicians against microbes. While popularizing science bacteriological metaphors became part of the political language of their age. At the same time the prestige of bacteriology was in turn employed to lend (...)
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  • Ehrlich's "Beautiful Pictures" and the Controversial Beginnings of Immunological Imagery.Alberto Cambrosio, Daniel Jacobi & Peter Keating - 1993 - Isis 84:662-699.
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  • The History of Histology: A Brief Survey of Sources.Brian Bracegirdle - 1977 - History of Science 15 (2):77-101.
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