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  1. Reductivism, Fatalism and Sociobiology.Mary Midgley - 1984 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 1 (1):107-114.
    ABSTRACT When does ‘reduction’ in the harmless sense of relating one science to another involve a sinister devaluing of the valuable? Only when the ‘reductive’ explanation is (1) treated as excluding others, and (2) so chosen as to make a moral point by illicit means. (1) is never legitimate; different kinds of explanation all have their place and do not compete. It is made to look plausible by (2), which can occur in many situations, but is usually called reduction only (...)
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  • Gender and the historiography of science.Ludmilla Jordanova - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Science 26 (4):469-483.
    The production of big pictures is arguably the most significant sign of the intellectual maturity of a field. It suggests both that the field's broad contours, refined over several generations of scholarship, enjoy the approval of practitioners, and that audiences exist with an interest in or need for overviews. The situation is somewhat more complicated in the history of science, since the existence of big historical pictures precedes that of a well-defined scholarly field by about two centuries. Broadly conceived histories (...)
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  • The life science: current ideas of biology.P. B. Medawar - 1977 - London: Wildwood House. Edited by J. S. Medawar.
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