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  1. Technology and Alchemical Debate in the Late Middle Ages.William Newman - 1989 - Isis 80:423-445.
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  • On Scientific Observation.Lorraine Daston - 2008 - Isis 99:97-110.
    For much of the last forty years, certain shared epistemological concerns have guided research in both the history and the philosophy of science: the testing of theory , the assessment of evidence, the bearing of theoretical and metaphysical assumptions on the reality of scientific objects, and, above all, the interaction of subjective and objective factors in scientific inquiry. This essay proposes a turn toward ontology—more specifically, toward the ontologies created and sustained by scientific observation. Such a shift in focus would (...)
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  • Godly Men and Mechanical Philosophers: Souls and Spirits in Restoration Natural Philosophy.Simon Schaffer - 1987 - Science in Context 1 (1):53-85.
    The ArgumentRecent historiography of the Scientific Revolution has challenged the assumption that the achievements of seventeenth-century natural philosophy can easily be described as the ‘mechanization of the world-picture.’ That assumption licensed a story which took mechanization as self-evidently progressive and so in no need of further historical analysis. The clock-work world was triumphant and inevitably so. However, a close examination of one key group of natural philosophers working in England during the 1670s shows that their program necessarily incorporated souls and (...)
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  • The mechanics' philosophy and the mechanical philosophy.James A. Bennett - 1986 - History of Science 24 (1):1-28.
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  • Technology and Alchemical Debate in the Late Middle Ages.William Newman - 1989 - Isis 80 (3):423-445.
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  • On Scientific Observation.Lorraine Daston - 2008 - Isis 99 (1):97-110.
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  • Working Machines and Noble Mechanics: Guidobaldo del Monte and the Translation of Knowledge.M. Henninger-Voss - 2000 - Isis 91:233-259.
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  • Biographies of Scientific Objects. [REVIEW]Lorraine Daston - 2002 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 23 (3/4):551-551.
    Why does an object or phenomenon become the subject of scientific inquiry? Why do some of these objects remain provocative, while others fade from center stage? And why do objects sometimes return as the focus of research long after they were once abandoned? Addressing such questions, _Biographies of Scientific Objects_ is about how whole domains of phenomena—dreams, atoms, monsters, culture, society, mortality, centers of gravity, value, cytoplasmic particles, the self, tuberculosis—come into being and sometimes pass away as objects of scientific (...)
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  • Motion in the Chemical Texts of the Renaissance.Allen Debus - 1973 - Isis 64:4-17.
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