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  1. The Visible College.Gary Wersky - 1978 - Science and Society 54 (4):501-504.
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  • The 'Arsenal' in the strand: Australian chemists and the British munitions effort 1916–1919.Roy M. MacLeod - 1989 - Annals of Science 46 (1):45-67.
    ‘Since the Great War began’, Professor David Orme Masson told a Melbourne audience in September 1915, ‘two statements have been made, and so frequently repeated that today they are commonplace. The first is that the result…depends on…men and more men, munitions and yet more munitions. The second is that this is a war of chemists and engineers—a war of applied science’. To Britain's assistance in this war of invention and applied science came more than 120 Australian scientists, whose particular technical (...)
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  • III.—The Organisation of Thought.A. N. Whitehead - 1917 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 17 (1):58-76.
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  • How the PhD came to Britain: a century of struggle for postgraduate education.Renate Simpson - 1983 - Guildford, Surrey: Society for Research into Higher Education.
    The development of postgraduate studies and the establishment of the Ph.D. in Britain are discussed. Events leading to the introduction of the Ph.D. degree between 1917 and 1920 are traced, and Germany and America's influence on the acceptance of postgraduate education and research in Britain is addressed. An analysis of the highly developed college system peculiar to the ancient English universities is included to identify factors that delayed the introduction of the Ph.D. in Britain. Individual provincial universities are chronicled, together (...)
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