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  1. The Transmission of Science.R. G. A. Dolby - 1977 - History of Science 15 (1):1-43.
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  • Knowledge in Transit.James A. Secord - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):654-672.
    What big questions and large‐scale narratives give coherence to the history of science? From the late 1970s onward, the field has been transformed through a stress on practice and fresh perspectives from gender studies, the sociology of knowledge, and work on a greatly expanded range of practitioners and cultures. Yet these developments, although long overdue and clearly beneficial, have been accompanied by fragmentation and loss of direction. This essay suggests that the narrative frameworks used by historians of science need to (...)
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  • Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective.Donna Haraway - 1988 - Feminist Studies 14 (3):575-599.
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  • The Place of Knowledge A Methodological Survey.Adi Ophir & Steven Shapin - 1991 - Science in Context 4 (1):3-22.
    A generation ago scientific ideas floated free in the air, as historians gazed up at them in wonder and admiration. From time to time, historians agreed, the ideas that made up the body of scientific truth became incarnate: they were embedded into the fleshly forms of human culture and attached to particular times and places. How this incarnation occurred was a great mystery. How could spirit be made flesh? How did the transcendent and the timeless enter the forms of the (...)
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  • A Place of Knowledge Re-Created: The Library of Michel de Montaigne.Adi Ophir - 1991 - Science in Context 4 (1):163-190.
    The ArgumentMontaigne'sEssayswere an exercise in self-knowledge carried out for more than twenty years in Montaigne's private library located in his mansion near Bordeaux. The library was a place of solitude as well as a place of knowledge, a kind ofheterotopiain which two sets of spatial relations coexisted and interacted: the social and the epistemic. The spatial demarcation and arrangement of the site – in both the physical and the symbolic sense – were necessary elements of the constitution of Montaigne's self (...)
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  • Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life. [REVIEW]Richard S. Westfall - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (1):128-130.
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  • Putting Science in Its Place: Geographies of Scientific Knowledge.David N. Livingstone - 2005 - Journal of the History of Biology 38 (2):388-389.
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  • Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life. [REVIEW]Richard C. Jennings - 1988 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 39 (3):403-410.
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