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  1. The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism: Hobbes to Locke.C. B. Macpherson - 1962 - Science and Society 28 (4):468-470.
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  • ‘Nullius in verba’ and ‘nihil in verbis’: public understanding of the role of language in science.Clive Sutton - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (1):55-64.
    This paper is about how the motto of the Royal Society has sometimes been misread, but it is also about how such a misreading could arise at all, and why it persists. I argue that the error is intimately associated with a traditional view of scientific language as a medium for descriptive reporting, a view which has been very influential in schools, and is consequently perpetuated in the public understanding of science. Much new scholarship confirms that this ‘straightforward’ view of (...)
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  • Ideas above his station: a social study of Hooke's curatorship of experiments.Stephen Pumfrey - 1991 - History of Science 29 (1):1-44.
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  • The show that never ends: perpetual motion in the early eighteenth century.Simon Schaffer - 1995 - British Journal for the History of Science 28 (2):157-189.
    During high summer 1721, while rioters and bankrupts gathered outside Parliament, Robert Walpole's new ministry forced through a bill to clear up the wreckage left by the stock-market crash, the South Sea Bubble, and the visionary projects swept away when it burst. In early August the President of the Royal Society Isaac Newton, a major investor in South Sea stock, and the Society's projectors, learned of a new commercial scheme promising apparently automatic profits, a project for a perpetual motion. Their (...)
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  • The Rise of Public Science: Rhetoric, Technology and Natural Philosophy in Newtonian Britain, 1660-1750.L. Stewart & J. A. Bennett - 1994 - Annals of Science 51 (5):555-555.
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  • The Nature of the Early Royal Society: Part I.K. Theodore Hoppen - 1976 - British Journal for the History of Science 9 (1):1-24.
    The foundation of the Royal Society marks an important step in the institutionalization of seventeenth-century British natural philosophy. The society's existence and activities provided a focus for the exchange of opinions, while its meetings and publications became forums for scientific debate. Some writers, however, have claimed much more than this for the society and have seen its establishment as marking a real watershed between, on the one hand, intellectually ‘conservative elements’ and, on the other, a set of ‘definite philosophical principles (...)
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  • arwin and Hegel. [REVIEW]F. C. S. Schiller - 1893 - Ancient Philosophy (Misc) 4:304.
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  • Public Lectures and Private Patronage in Newtonian England.Larry Stewart - 1986 - Isis 77:47-58.
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  • Promoting Experimental Learning: Experiment and the Royal Society, 1660-1727 by Marie Boas Hall. [REVIEW]Peter Dear - 1993 - Isis 84:148-149.
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  • Public Lectures and Private Patronage in Newtonian England.Larry Stewart - 1986 - Isis 77 (1):47-58.
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  • The Scientific Lady. A Social History of Women's Scientific Interests 1520-1918.Patricia Phillips & Michele S. Kohler - 1994 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 16 (2):355.
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