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  1. The Mangle of Practice.Andrew Pickering & Jed Z. Buchwald - 1996 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (3):479-482.
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  • Freud, Biologist of the Mind: Beyond the Psychoanalytic Legend.Frank J. Sulloway - 1979 - Journal of the History of Biology 15 (2):317-318.
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  • In Defense of Presentism.David L. Hull - 1979 - History and Theory 18 (1):1-15.
    Historians must have an understanding of the present both to reconstruct the past and to explain that reconstruction to a contemporary audience. One criticism of presentism is that it is an interpretation of the past in terms of current values and ideas, and fails to provide a complete picture of the historical context. Regardless of such practices, however, the historian is limited to the methodological and archival tools available during his own time. Meaning, reason, and truth are different for different (...)
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  • Ranke: The Meaning of History.Leonard Krieger - 1977 - University of Chicago Press.
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  • Epistemological Crises, Dramatic Narrative and the Philosophy of Science.Alisdair MacIntyre - 1977 - The Monist 60 (4):453-472.
    What is an epistemological crisis? Consider, first, the situation of ordinary agents who are thrown into such crises. Someone who has believed that he was highly valued by his employers and colleagues is suddenly fired; someone proposed for membership of a club whose members were all, so he believed, close friends is blackballed. Or someone falls in love and needs to know what the loved one really feels; someone falls out of love and needs to know how he or she (...)
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  • What is history?Edward Hallett Carr - 1961 - New York,: Knopf.
    Since its first publication in 1961 E.H. Carr's What is History? has established itself as the classic introduction to the subject. Ranging across topics such as historical objectivity, society and the individual, the nature of causation, and the possibility of progress, Carr delivered an incisive text that still has power to provoke debate today. For this fortieth anniversary reissue, Richard J. Evans has written an extensive new introduction that discusses the origins and the impact of the book, and assesses its (...)
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  • The Whig Interpretation of History.Herbert Butterfield - 1931 - G. Bell.
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  • The narrative reconstruction of science.Joseph Rouse - 1990 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 33 (2):179 – 196.
    In contrast to earlier accounts of the epistemic significance of narrative, it is argued that narrative is important in natural scientific knowledge. To recognize this, we must understand narrative not as a literary form in which knowledge is written, but as the temporal organization of the understanding of practical activity. Scientific research is a social practice, whereby researchers structure the narrative context in which past work is interpreted and significant possibilities for further work are projected. This narrative field displays a (...)
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  • The advancement of science: science without legend, objectivity without illusions.Philip Kitcher - 1993 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    During the last three decades, reflections on the growth of scientific knowledge have inspired historians, sociologists, and some philosophers to contend that scientific objectivity is a myth. In this book, Kitcher attempts to resurrect the notions of objectivity and progress in science by identifying both the limitations of idealized treatments of growth of knowledge and the overreactions to philosophical idealizations. Recognizing that science is done not by logically omniscient subjects working in isolation, but by people with a variety of personal (...)
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  • (4 other versions)The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.Thomas S. Kuhn - 1962 - Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Ian Hacking.
    Thomas S. Kuhn's classic book is now available with a new index.
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  • Consciousness, explanatory inversion and cognitive science.John R. Searle - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (1):585-642.
    Cognitive science typically postulates unconscious mental phenomena, computational or otherwise, to explain cognitive capacities. The mental phenomena in question are supposed to be inaccessible in principle to consciousness. I try to show that this is a mistake, because all unconscious intentionality must be accessible in principle to consciousness; we have no notion of intrinsic intentionality except in terms of its accessibility to consciousness. I call this claim the The argument for it proceeds in six steps. The essential point is that (...)
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  • (1 other version)On Discipline Building: The Paradoxes of George Sarton.Arnold Thackray & Robert Merton - 1972 - Isis 63:472-495.
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  • (1 other version)The social and economic roots of Newton's Principia.Boris Hessen - 2009 - In Boris Hessen, Henryk Grossmann, Gideon Freudenthal & Peter McLaughlin (eds.), The social and economic roots of the scientific revolution: texts by Boris Hessen and Henryk Grossmann. [Dordrecht]: Springer.
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  • Science and Relativism: Some key controversies in the philosophy of science.Larry Laudan - 1990 - University of Chicago Press.
    Some Key Controversies in the Philosophy of Science Larry Laudan. the mouths of my realist, relativist, and positivist. (By contrast, there is at least one person who hews to the line I have my prag- matist defending.) But I have gone to some  ...
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  • Consciousness, explanatory inversion and cognitive science.John R. Searle - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (1):189-189.
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  • The Cognitive Basis of the Discipline: Claude Bernard on Physiology.William Coleman - 1985 - Isis 76:49-70.
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  • Everyman his own historian.Carl Lotus Becker - 1960 - Chicago,: Quadrangle Books.
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  • (1 other version)Progress and its problems: Towards a theory of scientific growth.L. Laudan - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (1):57-71.
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  • (1 other version)Independence, Not Transcendence, for the Historian of Science.Paul Forman - 1991 - Isis 82:71-86.
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  • The pre-history of an academic discipline: The study of the history of science in the United States, 1891–1941. [REVIEW]Arnold Thackray - 1980 - Minerva 18 (3):448-473.
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  • The history of science and the philosophy of science.Larry Laudan - 1989 - In R. C. Olby, G. N. Cantor, J. R. R. Christie & M. J. S. Hodge (eds.), Companion to the History of Modern Science. Routledge. pp. 47--59.
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  • Past and present knowledges in the practice of the history of science.John V. Pickstone - 1995 - History of Science 33 (100):203-224.
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  • Narration and Knowledge.A. C. Danto - 1988 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 50 (1):193-193.
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  • Presentism and the Indeterminacy of Translation.Gary L. Hardcastle - 1991 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 22 (2):321-345.
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  • When is historiography whiggish?Ernst Mayr - 1990 - Journal of the History of Ideas 51 (2):301-309.
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  • On Whiggism.A. Rupert Hall - 1983 - History of Science 21 (1):45-59.
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  • (1 other version)On Discipline Building: The Paradoxes of George Sarton.Arnold Thackray & Robert K. Merton - 1972 - Isis 63 (4):473-495.
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  • (1 other version)Independence, Not Transcendence, for the Historian of Science.Paul Forman - 1991 - Isis 82 (1):71-86.
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  • Why Can't History Dance Contemporary Ballet? or Whig History and the Evils of Contemporary Dance.Loren Graham - 1981 - Science, Technology and Human Values 6 (1):3-6.
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  • Reading the Shape of Nature: Comparative Zoology at the Agassiz Museum.Mary P. Winsor - 1991 - University of Chicago Press.
    Reading the Shape of Nature vividly recounts the turbulent early history of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard and the contrasting careers of its founder Louis Agassiz and his son Alexander. Through the story of this institution and the individuals who formed it, Mary P. Winsor explores the conflicting forces that shaped systematics in the second half of the nineteenth century. Debates over the philosophical foundations of classification, details of taxonomic research, the young institution's financial struggles, and the personalities (...)
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