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  1. Miracles, Experiments, and the Ordinary Course of Nature.Peter Dear - 1990 - Isis 81 (4):663-683.
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  • The Genesis of the Concept of Scientific Progress.Edgar Zilsel - 1945 - Journal of the History of Ideas 6 (1/4):325.
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  • Restoration ideologies and the Royal Society.James R. Jacob - 1980 - History of Science 18 (1):25-38.
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  • Experiment, Community, and the Constitution of Nature in the Seventeenth Century.Daniel Garber - 1995 - Perspectives on Science 3 (2):173-205.
    Recent literature has explored at some length the transition between individual observations and the experimental facts that they are supposed to establish, emphasizing particularly the social dimension of this question. In this article I examine some crucial stages in the history of this problem, in particular, the way in which the establishment of experimental facts became social. I begin with a brief discussion of experimental facthood in late Renaissance thought before turning to Bacon and Descartes and showing the extent to (...)
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  • Francis Bacon on the Science of Jurisprudence.Paul H. Kocher - 1957 - Journal of the History of Ideas 18 (1/4):3.
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  • Testimony and proof in early-modern England.R. W. Serjeantson - 1999 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 30 (2):195-236.
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  • Novum Organum.Francis Bacon, Peter Urbach & John Gibson - 1996 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (1):125-128.
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  • Marvelous Facts and Miraculous Evidence in Early Modern Europe.Lorraine Daston - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 18 (1):93-124.
    I have sketched the well-known distinction between facts and evidence not to defend or attack it , but rather as a preface to a key episode in the history of the conceptual categories of fact and evidence. My question is neither, “Do neutral facts exist?” nor “How does evidence prove or disprove?” but rather, “How did our current conceptions of neutral facts and enlisted evidence, and the distinction between them, come to be?” How did evidence come to be incompatible with (...)
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  • “A Scholar and a Gentleman”: The Problematic Identity of the Scientific Practitioner in Early Modern England.Steven Shapin - 1991 - History of Science 29 (3):279-327.
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  • Novum Organum ; with Other Parts of the Great Instauration.Francis Bacon - 1994 - Paul Carus Student Editions.
    This entirely new classroom edition of Francis Bacon's great work of 1620, a founding document of empiricism and the scientific method, contains a new introduction and notes by translators/editors Urbach and Gibson. Index.
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  • The Origins of Modern Science: Henry Oldenburg's Contribution.John Henry - 1988 - British Journal for the History of Science 21 (1):103-109.
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  • Unpublished boyle papers relating to scientific method.—II.Richard S. Westfall - 1956 - Annals of Science 12 (2):103-117.
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  • The epistemology of testimony.Peter Lipton - 1998 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 29 (1):1-31.
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  • John Locke and the Changing Ideal of Scientific Knowledge.Margaret J. Osler - 1970 - Journal of the History of Ideas 31 (1):3.
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  • Essay Concerning Human Understanding.J. Locke - 1965
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  • Compiling nature's history: Travellers and travel narratives in the early royal society.Daniel Carey - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (3):269-292.
    SummaryThe relationship between travel, travel narrative, and the enterprise of natural history is explored, focusing on activities associated with the early Royal Society. In an era of expanding travel, for colonial, diplomatic, trade, and missionary purposes, reports of nature's effects proliferated, both in oral and written forms. Naturalists intent on compiling a comprehensive history of such phenomena, and making them useful in the process, readily incorporated these reports into their work. They went further by trying to direct the course of (...)
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  • Scientific experiment and legal expertise: The way of experience in seventeenth-century england.Rose-Mary Sargent - 1989 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 20 (1):19-45.
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  • Civility and Civic Culture in Early Modern England: The Meanings of Urban Freedom.Jonathan Barry - 2000 - In Peter Burke & Brian Harrison (eds.), Civil Histories: Essays Presented to Sir Keith Thomas. Oxford University Press.
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  • Miracles, Experiments, and the Ordinary Course of Nature.Peter Dear - 1990 - Isis 81:663-683.
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