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  1. Setting up a Discipline: Conflicting Agendas of the Cambridge History of Science Committee, 1936–1950.Anna-K. Mayer - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):665-689.
    Traditionally the domain of scientists, the history of science became an independent field of inquiry only in the twentieth century and mostly after the Second World War. This process of emancipation was accompanied by a historiographical departure from previous, ‘scientistic’ practices, a transformation often attributed to influences from sociology, philosophy and history. Similarly, the liberal humanists who controlled the Cambridge History of Science Committee after 1945 emphasized that their contribution lay in the special expertise they, as trained historians, brought to (...)
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  • Galileo and the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century.Alexandre Koyre - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52 (4):333-348.
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  • Perspectives on Priestley's science.John Mcevoy - 2000 - Enlightenment and Dissent 19:60-77.
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  • De-centring the ‘big picture’: The Origins of Modern Science and the modern origins of science.Andrew Cunningham & Perry Williams - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Science 26 (4):407-432.
    Like it or not, a big picture of the history of science is something which we cannot avoid. Big pictures are, of course, thoroughly out of fashion at the moment; those committed to specialist research find them simplistic and insufficiently complex and nuanced, while postmodernists regard them as simply impossible. But however specialist we may be in our research, however scornful of the immaturity of grand narratives, it is not so easy to escape from dependence – acknowledged or not – (...)
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  • Science in the Pub: Artisan Botanists in Early Nineteenth-Century Lancashire.Anne Secord - 1994 - History of Science 32 (3):269-315.
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  • Positivism, Whiggism, and the Chemical Revolution: A Study in the Historiography of Chemistry.John G. McEvoy - 1997 - History of Science 35 (1):1-33.
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  • On Whiggism.A. Rupert Hall - 1983 - History of Science 21 (1):45-59.
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  • Soviet Views on the History of Science.David Joravsky - 1955 - Isis 46 (1):3-13.
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  • (1 other version)Galileo and Plato.Alexandre Koyre - 1943 - Journal of the History of Ideas 4 (4):400.
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  • Museums and the establishment of the history of science at Oxford and Cambridge.J. A. Bennett - 1997 - British Journal for the History of Science 30 (1):29-46.
    In the Spring of 1944, an informal discussion took place in Cambridge between Mr. R. S. Whipple, Professor Allan Ferguson and Mr. F. H. C. Butler, concerning the formation of a national Society for the History of Science. This is the opening sentence of the inaugural issue of the Bulletin of the British Society for the History of Science, the Society's first official publication. Butler himself was the author of this outline account of the subsequent approach to the Royal Society, (...)
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  • Merton Revisited or Science and Society in the Seventeenth Century.A. Rupert Hall - 1963 - History of Science 2 (1):1-16.
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  • Merton Revisited.A. Rupert Hall - 1963 - History of Science 2:1.
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  • On Discipline Building: The Paradoxes of George Sarton.Arnold Thackray & Robert Merton - 1972 - Isis 63 (4):473-495.
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  • Études Galiléennes.Alexandre Koyré - 1939 - Hermann.
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  • (1 other version)Galileo and Plato.Alexandre Koyre - 1994 - Neusis 1 (1/4):51-83.
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  • Newton at the crossroads.Simon Schaffer - 1984 - Radical Philosophy 37:23-28.
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  • Independence, Not Transcendence, for the Historian of Science.Paul Forman - 1991 - Isis 82 (1):71-86.
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  • Peut-on planifier la recherche scientifique? Ce que nous dit l'histoire des mathématiques.Jean Pelseneer - 1955 - Isis 46 (2):95-98.
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  • Inventory as a Route to Understanding: Sarton, Neugebauer, and Sources.Lewis Pyenson - 1995 - History of Science 33 (3):253-282.
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  • Cain on Linnaeus: the scientist-historian as unanalysed entity.Mary P. Winsor - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (2):239-254.
    Zoologist A. J. Cain began historical research on Linnaeus in 1956 in connection with his dissatisfaction over the standard taxonomic hierarchy and the rules of binomial nomenclature. His famous 1958 paper ‘Logic and Memory in Linnaeus's System of Taxonomy’ argues that Linnaeus was following Aristotle's method of logical division without appreciating that it properly applies only to ‘analysed entities’ such as geometric figures whose essential nature is already fully known. The essence of living things being unanalysed, there is no basis (...)
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  • Beginnings in Cambridge.A. Hall - 1984 - Isis 75 (1):22-25.
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  • Science and Social Welfare in the Age of Newton. G. N. Clark.Robert Merton - 1938 - Isis 29 (1):119-121.
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  • Presidential Address: Can the History of Science be History?A. Rupert Hall - 1969 - British Journal for the History of Science 4 (3):207-220.
    It was in the closing year of the nineteenth century that Paul Tannery organized at an international historical congress the first international meeting devoted to the history of science. If antiquity would make a scholarly subject respectable, scholarship in the history of science must be beyond reproach; still earlier than Tannery and his colleagues in many European countries were the German historian of chemistry Kopp, and William Whewell, Master of Trinity; the eighteenth century had produced substantial works like those on (...)
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  • Charles Earle Raven: D.D., Hon. D.SC., F.B.A.F. H. C. Butler - 1965 - British Journal for the History of Science 2 (3):254-256.
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  • Fatal Mutilations: Educationism and the British Background to the 1931 International Congress for the History of Science and Technology.Anna-K. Mayer - 2002 - History of Science 40 (4):445-472.
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