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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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  • Laboratory Design and the Aim of Science: Andreas Libavius versus Tycho Brahe.Owen Hannaway - 1986 - Isis 77 (4):585-610.
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  • Tycho Brahe, Laboratory Design, and the Aim of Science: Reading Plans in Context.Jole Shackelford - 1993 - Isis 84:211-230.
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  • Die Apotheke als Forschungsstätte.Peter Dilg - 2000 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 23 (3):303-315.
    From the beginning, next to their essential function of preparing drugs pharmacies also served as educational institutions, in particular for the instruction of their own rising generation. Especially between 1750 and 1850 pharmacies in addition were engaged in scientific research. It were basically experimental‐analytic chemistry and after 1800 mainly phytochemistry which inspired numerous apothecaries to do corresponding work in their laboratories. For many of those scientifically ambitious pharmacists, however, pharmacies were merely a starting point in their professional career. More or (...)
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  • Early Laboratories c.1600–c.1800 and the Location of Experimental Science.Maurice Crosland - 2005 - Annals of Science 62 (2):233-253.
    Surprisingly little attention has been given hitherto to the definition of the laboratory. A space has to be specially adapted to deserve that title. It would be easy to assume that the two leading experimental sciences, physics and chemistry, have historically depended in a similar way on access to a laboratory. But while chemistry, through its alchemical ancestry with batteries of stills, had many fully fledged laboratories by the seventeenth century, physics was discovering the value of mathematics. Even experimental physics (...)
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  • Technoscience avant la lettre.Ursula Klein - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (2):226-266.
    I argue and demonstrate in this essay that interconnected systems of science and technology, or technoscience, existed long before the late nineteenth century, and that eighteenth-century chemistry was such an early form of technoscience. Based on recent historical research on the early development of carbon chemistry from the late 1820s until the 1840s—which revealed that early carbon chemistry was an experimental expert culture that was largely detached from the mundane industrial world—I further examine the question of the internal preconditions within (...)
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  • Chemische Laboratorien: Funktion und Disposition.Christoph Meinel - 2000 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 23 (3):287-302.
    In this essay laboratories are dealt with as symbolic spaces that structure social relationships and ways of knowledge in chemistry. The spatial vicissitudes of the nineteenth‐century research laboratory reflect, and at the same time direct, the way chemical knowledge is being produced, transmitted, and perceived.
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