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  1. ‘What makes you a scientist is the way you look at things’: ornithology and the observer 1930–1955.Helen Macdonald - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 33 (1):53-77.
    In the late 1930s networks of amateur observers across Britain were collecting data on birds , aircraft and society itself . This paper concentrates on birdwatching practice in the period 1930–1955. Through an examination of the construction of birdwatching's subjects, the Observers, and their objects, birds, it is argued that amateur strategies of scientific observation and record reflected, and were part-constitutive of, particular versions of ecological, national and social identity in this period. The paper examines how conflicts between a rural, (...)
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  • Thick Description: Towards an Interpretive Theory of Culture.Clifford Geertz - 2003 - In Gerard Delanty & Piet Strydom (eds.), Philosophies of social science: the classic and contemporary readings. Phildelphia: Open University.
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  • Everyday life and cultural theory: an introduction.Ben Highmore - 2002 - New York: Routledge.
    Everyday Life and Cultural Theory provides a unique critical and historical introduction to theories of everyday life. Ben Highmore traces the development of conceptions of everyday life, from the Mass Observation project of the 1930s to contemporary theorists. Individual chapters examine: * Theories of the everyday * Fragments of everyday life * Surrealism: the marvelous in the everyday * Walter Benjamin's Trash Aesthetics * Mass Observation: the science of everyday life * Henri Lefebvre's Dialectics of Everyday Life * Michel de (...)
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  • Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression.Jacques Derrida & Eric Prenowitz - 1995 - Diacritics 25 (2):9.
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  • Donna J. Harway, ModestWitness@SecondMillennium.FemaleMan©_MeetsOncoMouse™: Feminism and Technoscience. [REVIEW]Donna J. Haraway - 1997 - Journal of the History of Biology 30 (3):494-497.
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  • Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture.Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences Cary Nelson, Cary Nelson, Lawrence Grossberg & Dr Lawrence Grossberg - 1988 - Urbana : University of Illinois Press.
    This title provides a picture of the state of Marxist thinking. It aims to provoke a debate that will be of interest to those concerned with the status and development of Marxism and also to theorists in all fields of the human sciences.
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  • The Interpretation of Cultures.Clifford Geertz - 2017
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  • Quiddities. An Intermittently Philosophical Dictionary.W. Quine - 1989 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 51 (3):553-554.
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  • (1 other version)The Grammar of Science.Edgar A. Singer & Karl Pearson - 1900 - Philosophical Review 9 (4):448.
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  • The Social Function of Science.J. Bernal - 1940 - Philosophical Review 49:377.
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  • Infinite Archives.David F. Bell - 2004 - Substance 33 (3):148-161.
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  • (2 other versions)The Scientific Outlook.Bertrand Russell - 2008 - Routledge.
    According to Bertrand Russell, science is knowledge; that which seeks general laws connecting a number of particular facts. It is, he argues, far superior to art, where much of the knowledge is intangible and assumed. In The Scientific Outlook,Russell delivers one of his most important works, exploring the nature and scope of scientific knowledge, the increased power over nature that science affords and the changes in the lives of human beings that result from new forms of science. Insightful and accessible, (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Scientific Outlook.Bertrand Russell - 1932 - Philosophy 7 (26):233-235.
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  • Scenes in a Library: Alain Resnais and Toute la mémoire du monde.Steven Ungar - 2012 - Substance 41 (2):58-78.
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  • Aufbau/Bauhaus: Logical Positivism and Architectural Modernism.Peter Galison - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (4):709-752.
    On 15 October 1959, Rudolf Carnap, a leading member of the recently founded Vienna Circle, came to lecture at the Bauhaus in Dessau, southwest of Berlin. Carnap had just finished his magnum opus, The Logical Construction of the World, a book that immediately became the bible of the new antiphilosophy announced by the logical positivists. From a small group in Vienna, the movement soon expanded to include an international following, and in the sixty years since has exerted a powerful sway (...)
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  • Calculable minds and manageable individuals.Nikolas Rose - 1988 - History of the Human Sciences 1 (2):179-200.
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  • (1 other version)The Scientific Outlook.Bertrand Russell - 1933 - Philosophical Review 42:237.
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  • The nature of the glut.Nick Levine - 2017 - History of the Human Sciences 30 (1):32-49.
    Today, complaints about information overload – associated with an overwhelming deluge of data – are commonplace. Early modernists have reacted to these concerns by showing that similar ones have arisen before. While this perspective is useful, it leaves out what was novel about the concept of information overload, which relied on a historically specific model of the human being. I trace the term’s history back to 1960, when the American psychologist and systems theorist James Grier Miller published his article on (...)
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  • The Scientific Attitude.C. H. Waddington - 1949 - Philosophy of Science 16 (3):266-266.
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  • The Visible College.Gary Wersky - 1978 - Science and Society 54 (4):501-504.
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  • Mass Observation and Everyday Life: Culture.Nick Hubble - 2006 - History, Theory 3.
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  • The freedom of necessity.John Desmond Bernal - 1949 - London,: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
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  • Paranoid Modernism: Literary Experiment, Psychosis and the Professionalism of English Society.David Trotter - 2001 - Oxford University Press UK.
    What provoked the fierce and systematic 'will to experiment' that was Modernism? Paranoia--thought especially to afflict those whose identities were founded on professional expertise--was described in the contemporary psychiatric literature as the violent imposition of system onto life's randomness. Modernism's great writers--Conrad, Ford, Lewis, Lawrence--both lived and wrote about these psychopathies of expertise.
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