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  1. William Robert Grove, the Correlation of Forces, and the Conservation of Energy.G. N. Cantor - 1975 - Centaurus 19 (4):273-290.
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  • Kirk and Causality in Edinburgh, 1805.John Burke - 1970 - Isis 61:340-354.
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  • An Idol of the Market-Place: Baconianism in Nineteenth Century Britain.Richard Yeo - 1985 - History of Science 23 (3):251-298.
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  • Work and Waste: Political Economy and Natural Philosophy in Nineteenth Century Britain (III).M. Norton Wise & Crosbie Smith - 1990 - History of Science 28 (3):221-261.
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  • Work and Waste: Political Economy and Natural Philosophy in Nineteenth Century Britain (II).M. Norton Wise & Crosbie Smith - 1989 - History of Science 27 (4):391-449.
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  • Work and Waste: Political Economy and Natural Philosophy in Nineteenth Century Britain.M. Norton Wise & Crosbie Smith - 1989 - History of Science 27 (3):263-301.
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  • Mediating Machines.M. Norton Wise - 1988 - Science in Context 2 (1):77-113.
    The ArgumentThe societal context within which science is pursued generally acts as a productive force in the generation of knowledge. To analyze this action it is helpful to consider particular modes of mediation through which societal concerns are projected into the very local and esoteric concerns of a particular domain of research. One such mode of mediation occurs through material systems. Here I treat two such systems – the steam engine and the electric telegraph – in the natural philosophy of (...)
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  • The Geological Survey of Great Britain as a Research School, 1839–1855.James A. Secord - 1986 - History of Science 24 (3):223-275.
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  • Natural Philosophy and Public Spectacle in the Eighteenth Century.Simon Schaffer - 1983 - History of Science 21 (1):1-43.
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  • ”Scientist’: The Story of a Word.Sydney Ross - 1962 - Annals of Science 18 (2):65-85.
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  • Whewell and Mill on the Relation Between Philosophy of Science and History of Science.John Losee - 1983 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 14 (2):113.
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  • Conversion of Forces and the Conservation of Energy.P. M. Heimann - 1974 - Centaurus 18 (2):147-161.
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  • Science in the City: The London Institution, 1819–40.J. N. Hays - 1974 - British Journal for the History of Science 7 (2):146-162.
    In the first half of the nineteenth century the largest and wealthiest ‘popular’ scientific establishment in London was the London Institution, founded by a group of prominent City men in 1805. During most of its early years this Institution had over 900 members; within a year of its foundation it had accumulated funds of £76,000, which dwarfed those possessed by any similar body in this period; by 1819 it had erected an imposing building in Finsbury Circus, a structure with a (...)
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  • Work for the workers: Advances in engineering mechanics and instruction in France, 1800–1830.I. Grattan-Guinness - 1984 - Annals of Science 41 (1):1-33.
    An account is given of the emergence of the concept of work as a basic component of mechanics. It was largely an achievement of engineer savants in France during the Bourbon Restoration , with Navier, Coriolis and Poncelet playing the major roles. Some aspects of the eighteenth-century prehistory are described, and also concurrent developments in French engineering. The principal problem areas were friction, hydraulics, machine performance and ergonomics, and especially in the last context the developments became involved with social and (...)
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  • William Whewell on the History of Science.Richard Yeo - 1987 - Metascience 5:25.
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