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  1. (2 other versions)How do Scientists Reach Agreement about Novel Observations?David Gooding - 1986 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 17 (2):205.
    I outline a pragmatic view of scientists' use of observation which draws attention to non-discursive, instrumental and social contexts of observation, in order to explain scientists' agreement about the appearance and significance of new phenomena. I argue that: observation is embedded in a network of activities, techniques, and interests; that experimentalists make construals of new phenomena which enable them communicate exploratory techniques and their outcomes, and that empirical enquiry consists of communicative, exploratory and predictive strategies whose interdependence ensures that, notwithstanding (...)
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  • Ampere and the Programming of Research.Christine Blondel & L. Williams - 1985 - Isis 76 (4):559-561.
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  • What Were Ampere's Earliest Discoveries in Electrodynamics?L. Williams - 1983 - Isis 74 (4):492-508.
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  • Sur les premières recherches de formule électrodynamique par Ampère.Christine Blondel - 1978 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 31 (1):53-65.
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  • The Aim and Structure of Physical Theory.Pierre Duhem & Philip P. Wiener - 1955 - Science and Society 19 (1):85-87.
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  • Poisson's Memoirs on Electricity: Academic Politics and a New Style in Physics.R. W. Home - 1983 - British Journal for the History of Science 16 (3):239-259.
    Siméon Denis Poisson was a major figure in French science throughout the first forty years of the nineteenth century. Though his papers lack the brilliant mathematical creativity of some of those published by even more gifted contemporaries such as Joseph Fourier and Augustin-Louis Cauchy , they nevertheless display a formidable talent for mathematical analysis, applied with great industry and success in a large number of investigations ranging over the whole domain of mathematical physics. Several were of such importance that even (...)
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  • Ampère, the Etherians, and the Oersted Connexion.Kenneth L. Caneva - 1980 - British Journal for the History of Science 13 (2):121-138.
    In 1826 André-Marie Ampère published the ‘Mathematical theory of electrodynamic phenomena, uniquely derived from experiment’, in which he showed how the mathematical law for the force between current elements could be derived from four ingenious equilibrium experiments. He made a great show of following a Newtonian inductivist methodology, and his law, like Newton's for gravitation, was presented as a purely descriptive mathematical expression for a certain class of phenomena, one for which its author did not provide any causal or ontological (...)
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  • Scientific enterprise and the patronage of research in France 1800–70.Robert Fox - 1973 - Minerva 11 (4):442-473.
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