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  1. Science and Civilization in China.Joseph Needham - 1958 - Science and Society 22 (1):74-77.
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  • Discipline and Bounding: The History and Sociology of Science as Seen through the Externalism-Internalism Debate.Steven Shapin - 1992 - History of Science 30 (4):333-369.
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  • The embodiment of value: C. S. Sherrington and the cultivation of science.Roger Smith - 2000 - British Journal for the History of Science 33 (3):283-311.
    The paper examines the reputation of C. S. Sherrington as both eminent physiologist and eminent representative of scientific culture. It describes Sherrington's ‘figurehead’ status. In his career, research and personal manner, he embodied a life of science, not only not in opposition to humanistic values but in fact appearing to be the highest achievement of those values. An analysis of Sherrington's research, of his lectures on Man on His Nature and of his poetry supports this account. The paper uses Sherrington's (...)
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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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  • Moralizing science: the uses of science's past in national education in the 1920s.Anna-Katherina Mayer - 1997 - British Journal for the History of Science 30 (1):51-70.
    The present interest of Englishmen in education is partly due to the fact that they are impressed by German thoroughness. Now let there be no mistake. The war has shown the effectiveness of German education in certain departments of life, but it has shown not only its ineffectiveness, but its grotesque absurdity in regard to other departments of life, and those the departments which are, even in a political sense, the most important. In the organization of material resources Germany has (...)
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  • Bateson and Chromosomes: Conservative Thought in Science.William Coleman - 1971 - Centaurus 15 (3):228-314.
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  • The pre-history of an academic discipline: The study of the history of science in the United States, 1891–1941. [REVIEW]Arnold Thackray - 1980 - Minerva 18 (3):448-473.
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  • Introduction.Margaret Macdonald, A. M. Maciver, P. T. Geach & Nathaniel Lawrence - 1955 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 20 (3):291-292.
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  • Newton at the crossroads.Simon Schaffer - 1984 - Radical Philosophy 37:23-28.
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