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  1. Scholarship and the History of the Behavioural Sciences.Robert M. Young - 1966 - History of Science 5 (1):1-51.
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  • Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory.Jennifer Whiting - 1997 - Philosophical Review 106 (4):610.
    True to his longstanding bias against grand unifying theories, Hacking chooses to pursue these questions by focusing on a specific case of memory-thinking: the history of multiple personality. His excavation of the contemporary terrain leads him, however, to the surprisingly grand conclusion that the various sciences of memory—including neurological studies of localization, experimental studies of recall, and studies in the psychodynamics of memory—all emerged in connection with attempts to “scientize the soul,” as a result of which spiritual battles have been (...)
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  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Daniel P. Todes - 2002 - Journal of the History of Biology 35 (3):595-623.
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  • Reviews: Roger Smith, Inhibition, History and Meaning in the Sciences of Mind and Brain. London: Free Association Books, 1992. £37.50, xi + 323 pp. [REVIEW]Greta Jones - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (3):121-122.
    In everyday parlance, "inhibition" suggests repression, tight control, the opposite of freedom. In medicine and psychotherapy the term is commonplace, its definition understood. Relating how inhibition—the word and the concept—became a bridge between society at large and the natural sciences of mind and brain, Smith constructs an engagingly original history of our view of ourselves. Not until the late nineteenth century did the term "inhibition" become common in English, connoting the dependency of reason and of civilization itself on the repression (...)
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  • Meaning and understanding in the history of ideas.Quentin Skinner - 1969 - History and Theory 8 (1):3-53.
    Emphasis on autonomy of texts presupposes that there are perennial concepts. But researchers' expectations may turn history into mythology of ideas; researchers forget that an agent cannot be described as doing something he could not understand as a description, and that thinking may be inconsistent. They will never uncover voluntary oblique strategies and by treating ideas as units will confuse sentences with statements. On the other hand, a contextual approach to the meaning of texts dismisses ideas as unimportant effects. Neither (...)
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  • The Great Titration: Science and Society in East and West.Earle J. Coleman - 1971 - Philosophy East and West 21 (3):331-332.
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  • The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.David Bohm - 1964 - Philosophical Quarterly 14 (57):377-379.
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  • The Identity of the History of Ideas.John Dunn - 1968 - Philosophy 43 (164):85 - 104.
    Two types of criticism are frequently levelled at the history of ideas in general and the history of political theory in particular. The first is very much that of historians practising in other fields; that it is written as a saga in which all the great deeds are done by entities which could not, in principle, do anything. In it, Science is always wrestling with Theology, Empiricism with Rationalism, monism with dualism, evolution with the Great Chain of Being, artifice with (...)
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  • Biographies of Scientific Objects. [REVIEW]Lorraine Daston - 2002 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 23 (3/4):551-551.
    Why does an object or phenomenon become the subject of scientific inquiry? Why do some of these objects remain provocative, while others fade from center stage? And why do objects sometimes return as the focus of research long after they were once abandoned? Addressing such questions, _Biographies of Scientific Objects_ is about how whole domains of phenomena—dreams, atoms, monsters, culture, society, mortality, centers of gravity, value, cytoplasmic particles, the self, tuberculosis—come into being and sometimes pass away as objects of scientific (...)
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  • Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory.Ian Hacking - 1997 - Philosophical Quarterly 47 (189):531-533.
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  • The Mechanization of the World Picture.Eduard Jan Dijksterhuis - 1961 - Science and Society 35 (2):232-238.
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  • The Edge of Objectivity.Charles Coulston Gillispie - 1960
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  • G. H. Mead: A Contemporary Re-examination of His Thought.Hans Joas & Raymond Meyer - 1987 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 1 (1):77-81.
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  • Paracelsus: An Introduction to Philosophical Medicine in the Era of the Renaissance.Walter Pagel - 1986 - Journal of the History of Biology 19 (1):162-166.
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  • The Origins of Modern Science, 1300-1800.H. Butterfield - 1951 - Science and Society 15 (4):348-351.
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  • Science, Philosophy, and Human Behavior in the Soviet Union.Loren R. Graham - 1992 - Studies in Soviet Thought 44 (2):140-142.
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