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  1. Penicillin and the new Elizabethans.Robert Bud - 1998 - British Journal for the History of Science 31 (3):305-333.
    Generally, the mass media in Britain, as elsewhere, treat the history of science as arcane knowledge. A few iconic tales do none the less come to permeate public consciousness. How do these come to be selected from the myriad of possible narratives?One of the most enduring and well known of stories is the discovery of penicillin, which stretched from Alexander Fleming's observation in 1928 to the award of the Nobel prize to Fleming, Howard Florey and Ernst Chain in 1945 and (...)
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  • Cortisone therapy: a challenge to academic medicine in 1949-1952.G. Hetenyi & J. Karsh - 1996 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 40 (3):426-439.
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  • Inventions, patents and commercial development from governmentally financed research in Great Britain: The origins of the National Research Development Corporation. [REVIEW]S. T. Keith - 1981 - Minerva 19 (1):92-122.
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