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  1. Dialogue concerning the Two Chief World Systems.Galileo Galilei & Stillman Drake - 1954 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 5 (19):253-256.
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  • (1 other version)The Neglect of Experiment.Allan Franklin - 1988 - Philosophy of Science 55 (2):306-308.
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  • Science and its Fabrication.Alan Francis Chalmers - 1990 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    While acknowledging its theory-ladeness, Chalmers (history and philosophy, U. of Sydney) defends the objectivity of scientific knowledge against those critics for whom such knowledge is both subjective and ideological.
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  • Bayesian Personalism, the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes, and Duhem's Problem.Jon Dorling - 1979 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 10 (3):177.
    The detailed analysis of a particular quasi-historical numerical example is used to illustrate the way in which a Bayesian personalist approach to scientific inference resolves the Duhemian problem of which of a conjunction of hypotheses to reject when they jointly yield a prediction which is refuted. Numbers intended to be approximately historically accurate for my example show, in agreement with the views of Lakatos, that a refutation need have astonishingly little effect on a scientist's confidence in the ‘hard core’ of (...)
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  • Galileo on the Telescope and the Eye.Harold I. Brown - 1985 - Journal of the History of Ideas 46 (4):487-501.
    Galileo's study of the heavens through the telescope is one of the earliest systematic uses of this kind of instrument. This study generated a number of direct conflicts between telescopic and naked eye observation, and Galileo responded to these conflicts by attempting to show why the telescopic observations are more reliable than those made with the unaided eye. As we shall see, Galileo regularly returned to this topic, but it has been largely neglected in the extensive literature on Galileo and (...)
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  • Galileo's telescopic observations of Venus and Mars.Alan Chalmers - 1985 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 36 (2):175-184.
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  • The Politics and Rhetoric of Scientific Method. J. A. Schuster, R. R. Yeo.Alex C. Michalos - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (3):486-486.
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  • The Politics and Rhetoric of Scientific Method: Historical Studies.J. Schuster & R. R. Yeo - 1986 - .
    The institutionalization of History and Philosophy of Science as a distinct field of scholarly endeavour began comparatively earl- though not always under that name - in the Australasian region. An initial lecturing appointment was made at the University of Melbourne immediately after the Second World War, in 1946, and other appoint ments followed as the subject underwent an expansion during the 1950s and 1960s similar to that which took place in other parts of the world. Today there are major Departments (...)
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  • The Importance of Galileo's Nontelescopic Observations concerning the Size of the Fixed Stars.Henry Frankel - 1978 - Isis 69 (1):77-82.
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