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Previous articleNext article FreeNotes on ContributorsPDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmailQR Code SectionsMoreElisa Andretta is a research fellow at the Institut d'Ethique, Histoire, Humanité (University of Geneva). She is the author of Roma medica: Anatomie d'un système médical au XVIe siècle (Rome, 2011) and of several essays on the social and cultural history of medicine in early modern Rome.Safia Azzouni is a researcher at the Institute for German Literature at Humboldt University of Berlin. She has published on literature and science around 1800 (Kunst als praktische Wissenschaft [Böhlau, 2005]) and on popular science in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Ruth Barton has written many articles on the history of Victorian science. Currently she is completing a book on the X Club, editing correspondence of the Victorian physicist John Tyndall, and continuing research on the history of New Zealand science.Ann-Sophie Barwich is a Presidential Scholar in Society and Neuroscience at the Center for Science and Society, Columbia University. She obtained her Ph.D. in philosophy at the Egenis Centre for the Study of the Life Sciences at the University of Exeter in 2013 under the supervision of John Dupré. Between 2013 and 2015 she was a postdoctoral fellow at the Konrad Lorenz Institute in Klosterneuburg, Austria. Her research is in the philosophy and history of science, in particular on current and past developments in olfactory research.Barbara J. Becker taught history of science at the University of California, Irvine, until her retirement. She is the author of the scholarly biography Unravelling Starlight: William and Margaret Huggins and the Rise of the New Astronomy (Cambridge, 2011).Domenico Bertoloni Meli teaches history of science and medicine at Indiana University, Bloomington. He has worked especially on mechanics and anatomy in the early modern period. His most recent book is Mechanism, Experiment, Disease: Marcello Malpighi and Seventeenth-Century Anatomy (Baltimore, 2011). He is currently working on the visual representation of disease from the Renaissance to the nineteenth century.Allison Margaret Bigelow is an assistant professor in the Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese at the University of Virginia, where she teaches colonial Latin American and scientific literatures. From 2012 to 2014 she held an NEH fellowship at the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture at the College of William and Mary.Alexander Blum has been a research scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin since 2010. He works on the history of modern physics, in particular quantum field theory and quantum gravity.Debra Blumenthal is an associate professor of history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, whose research is centered in the late medieval and early modern Mediterranean. Her current research explores the relationships between midwives, wet nurses, and mothers in late medieval and early modern Spain.Michael Bravo is a historian of science and senior lecturer at the University of Cambridge. His research is concerned with postcolonial approaches to the history of the field sciences.J. R. Christianson is author of On Tycho's Island (2000), coeditor of Tycho Brahe and Prague: Crossroads of European Science (2002), and contributor to Victor E. Thoren, The Lord of Uraniborg (1990). His current project is a brief biography of Tycho Brahe in the Reaktion Books series “Renaissance Lives.”J. F. M. Clark is Director of the Institute for Environmental History, School of History, University of St. Andrews. His past publications in history of science, medicine, and environment include Bugs and the Victorians (2009) and Aesthetic Fatigue (coedited with John Scanlan, 2013).Joseph W. Dauben is Distinguished Professor of History and History of Science at the City University of New York. He is the author of biographies of Georg Cantor and Abraham Robinson and, most recently, of a three-volume Chinese-English dual-language edition of the ancient Chinese classic The Nine Chapters on the Art of Mathematics (2013), written in collaboration with Guo Shuchun and Xu Yibao. In January 2012 he received the American Mathematical Society's Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize for History of Mathematics.Karel Davids is Professor of Economic and Social History at the VU University Amsterdam. He has published widely on the history of knowledge, the history of technology, and maritime history. His latest book is Religion, Technology, and the Great and Little Divergences: China and Europe Compared, c. 700–1800 (2013).Carolyn Dean is Professor of History of Art and Visual Culture at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her books include Inka Bodies and the Body of Christ: Corpus Christi in Colonial Cuzco, Peru (1999), and A Culture of Stone: Inka Perspectives on Rock (2010).Sheila Ann Dean is an independent scholar, freelance editor, and researcher in Ithaca, New York. She worked on the Darwin Correspondence Project for fourteen years and has written on the botanist John Scott, another Darwin protégé, as well as the twentieth-century Darwinian paleontologist William King Gregory.Theodora Dryer is a doctoral candidate in History and Science Studies at the University of California, San Diego. Her current research explores twentieth-century applied mathematics and its extensions into economics and the social sciences.François Duchesneau is Emeritus Professor of History of Modern Philosophy and Philosophy of Science at the Department of Philosophy of the Université de Montréal. His most recent books include Leibniz: Le Vivant et l'organisme (Paris: Vrin, 2010).Caroline Ehrhardt is an associate professor in history of science at the Université Paris 8 (France). Her research interests include the history of algebra and the history of French mathematic education (nineteenth century). She has recently published Evariste Galois, la fabrication d'une icône mathématiques (Paris: EHESS, 2011).Bart Elmore is Assistant Professor of Environmental History at the University of Alabama and author of Citizen Coke: The Making of Coca-Cola Capitalism (Norton, 2015).Paul Fayter is retired from teaching but still studies intersections among Victorian evolutionary theories, natural theologies and theologies of nature, planetary astronomy and scientific romances (especially concerning Mars and Martians), and ethics and scientific naturalism.Ofer Gal teaches history and philosophy of science at the University of Sydney and has published extensively on early modern science. His latest book, Baroque Science (Chicago, 2013), was coauthored with Raz Chen-Morris.Michael Ghiselin is a Senior Research Fellow at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco and Chair of its Center for the History and Philosophy of Science. His research interests these days mainly have to do with the history and philosophy of systematics.Sander L. Gilman is Distinguished Professor of the Liberal Arts and Sciences and Professor of Psychiatry at Emory University. He is author or editor of over eighty books. His Illness and Image: Case Studies in the Medical Humanities appeared with Transaction Publishers in 2015; his most recent edited volume, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam: Collaboration and Conflict in the Age of Diaspora, was published with the Hong Kong University Press in 2014.Yves Gingras is Professor in the Department of History and Canada Research Chair in History and Sociology of Science at the Université du Québec à Montréal. His research focuses on the mathematization of the sciences, the uses of analogies, the transformation of the universities, and the dynamic of scientific disciplines. His most recent books are Sociologie des sciences (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 2012) and Les derives de l'évaluation de la recherche: Du bon usage de la bibliométrie (Paris: Raisons d'Agir, 2013). He is also the editor of Controverses: Accords et désaccords en sciences humaines et sociales (Paris: CNRS Éditions, 2014).Michael D. Gordin is Rosengarten Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Princeton University, where he specializes in the history of modern science, especially in Russia and the United States. His most recent book is Scientific Babel: How Science Was Done Before and After Global English (University of Chicago Press, 2015).Mott T. Greene is John Magee Professor of Science and Values (Emeritus) and Affiliate Professor of Earth and Space Sciences at the University of Washington. His most recent book is Alfred Wegener: A Scientific Life (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015). Its publication coincided with the centennial of Wegener's first edition of Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane.Frederick Gregory is Professor Emeritus of History of Science at the University of Florida in Gainesville. He continues to pursue his interest in the history of science and religion, especially in the German-speaking lands of the nineteenth century.Holly Grout is an assistant professor of European history at the University of Alabama. She specializes in the history of France, women, and gender. Her first book is The Force of Beauty: Transforming French Ideas of Femininity in the Third Republic (Louisiana State University Press, 2015).Walter E. Grunden, Associate Professor at Bowling Green State University, is the author of Secret Weapons and World War II: Japan in the Shadow of Big Science and numerous articles on nuclear history. His ongoing research examines the intersection of science, society, and the state in twentieth-century Japan and China.Erling Haagensen is an independent Danish author and researcher, specializing in medieval history and history of science. Since 1993 he has published nine books on the subject, the latest in 2014.Barton C. Hacker is senior curator of armed forces history in the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, Washington, D.C., and convener of the annual ICOHTEC symposium on the social history of military technology. Among his major research interests are the history of military technology and women's military history.Piers J. Hale is Associate Professor in the History of Modern Science at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of Political Descent: Malthus, Mutualism, and the Politics of Evolution in Victorian England.Bert Hall is Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto. He has specialized in the history of late medieval and Renaissance technology, including the machine books of the fifteenth century.Anne Hardy is Honorary Professor at the Centre for History in Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She is the author of The Epidemic Streets: Infectious Disease and the Rise of Preventive Medicine (1993). Her newest book is Salmonella Infections, Networks of Knowledge, and Public Health in Britain, 1880–1975 (Oxford University Press, 2015).Anne Harrington is the Franklin L. Ford Professor of the History of Science at Harvard, specializing in the history of psychiatry, neuroscience, and the other mind and behavioral sciences. Her publications include Medicine, Mind, and the Double Brain (1988), Reenchanted Science (1997), The Cure Within (2007), and The Biological Turn in Psychiatry (forthcoming).J. N. Hays is Professor Emeritus of History at Loyola University, Chicago. He is the author of The Burdens of Disease (2nd ed., Rutgers University Press, 2009), and his current synthetic project relates nineteenth-century Western empires and world disease environments.John Henry is Professor Emeritus at the University of Edinburgh. He has published widely in the history of science and medicine and has recently brought together a collection of some of his articles in Religion, Magic, and the Origins of Science in Early Modern England (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012).Hiro Hirai is a research fellow at Radboud University Nijmegen (Netherlands). He has published widely in Renaissance philosophy, science, and medicine, including Le concept de semence (2005) and Medical Humanism and Natural Philosophy (2011). He is also Associate Editor of Early Science and Medicine.Nick Hopwood is Reader in History of Science and Medicine at the University of Cambridge, where he runs a Wellcome Trust–funded research program on “Generation to Reproduction.” Haeckel's Embryos: Images, Evolution, and Fraud was published by Chicago in 2015.Michael Hunter is Emeritus Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is the principal editor of the works, correspondence, and workdiaries of Robert Boyle and the author of Boyle: Between God and Science (2009) as well as many other books on the intellectual history of early modern England.Ashley Kerr is Assistant Professor of Spanish/Latin American Studies at the University of Idaho. Her current research focuses on the intersections of politics, gender, and racial science in cultural representations of indigenous peoples in Argentina, Uruguay, and Chile.Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of History at Yale University. Her most recent publication is “Le Corps explore,” in Histoire de la pensée medicale contemporaine (Editions du Seuil, 2014). A revised edition of Naked to the Bone: Medical Imaging in the Twentieth Century was published in 1998, by Perseus. She has received grants from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.Jan Marten Ivo Klaver is the author of Geology and Religious Sentiment (1997), The Apostle of the Flesh: A Critical Life of Charles Kingsley (2006), and Scientific Expeditions to the Arab World, 1761–1881 (2009). He teaches at the University of Urbino.Kevin Kuhl is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. His dissertation is in the philosophy of mathematics; it focuses on noneliminative structuralism as an account of the subject matter of mathematics and what implications this ontological stance has for mathematical practice.Niels C. Lind is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Waterloo. He is the coauthor of five books and more than a hundred articles about structural safety, management of risks to the public, and future energy supply.John M. Logsdon is Professor Emeritus at the Space Policy Institute, George Washington University; he founded the Institute in 1987. He is author of John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon (Basingstoke, 2010) and After Apollo? Richard Nixon and the American Space Program (Basingstoke, 2015).Pamela O. Long is an independent historian who has written extensively on premodern history of science and technology. Her books include Openness, Secrecy, Authorship: Technical Arts and the Culture of Knowledge from Antiquity to the Renaissance (2001) and Artisan/Practitioners and the Rise of the New Sciences, 1400–1600 (2011). She is at work on a history of engineering and topography in late sixteenth-century Rome.Dov Lungu has conducted research at the London School of Economics, the University of Toronto, and the IBM Centre for Advanced Studies in Toronto. He teaches in the Department of Science and Technology Studies, York University. His current research focuses on the role of users in the development and diffusion of information technology.Alison E. Martin currently lectures at the University of Reading (U.K.) and has published widely on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century nonfictional travel writing, translation, and science. Her second book, based on her Habilitation (MLU Halle-Wittenberg, 2013), focuses on the translation and reception of Alexander von Humboldt's writing in nineteenth-century Britain.J. Rosser Matthews is a historian of science and medicine who has written a book on the history of the clinical trial. He teaches science writing and writing for the health professions in the Professional Writing Program at the University of Maryland, College Park.Jitse van der Meer is a professor of biology (emeritus) and part-time professor in history and philosophy of science at Redeemer University College. He is editor or co-editor of Facets of Faith and Science, Science in Theistic Contexts, and Nature and Scripture in the Abrahamic Religions. His current research is on religion and science, history and philosophy of nineteenth-century biology (G. Cuvier, T. Dobzhansky), and theoretical biology.Marcia Meldrum is a researcher and lecturer in the History and Social Studies of Medicine Program at UCLA. She has published on the history of pain research, contraception, and randomized clinical trials.Elizabeth W. Mellyn is an associate professor of history at the University of New Hampshire, where she teaches early modern European history. Her book Mad Tuscans and Their Families: A History of Mental Disorder in Early Modern Italy was recently published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.Laura Meneghello studied philosophy in Venice, Paris, and Utrecht. She is a Ph.D. student in history at Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, writing her thesis on “Jacob Moleschott: Science, Politics, and Popularization in Nineteenth-Century Europe.” She has published articles and taught seminars on the history of science in English and German.Eirini Mergoupi-Savaidou has taught history of science at the University of Athens and the Hellenic Open University. Her research interests focus on the history of science and technology in the long nineteenth century, particularly on science popularization and communication, the public images of science, scientific institutions, and science and religion.Florian G. Mildenberger is affiliated with the Institute for the History of Medicine, Robert Bosch Foundation, Stuttgart. His main research interests are social and medical subcultures in the Western world since 1800. His latest projects include a history of chiropractic and German homoeopathic doctors and National Socialism.David Philip Miller is Emeritus Professor, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, and coeditor, with Rob Iliffe, of Annals of Science. He continues to work and publish on the life and innovations of James Watt and on other aspects of science and technology in industrial and imperial development.Ian Mosby is a postdoctoral fellow at McMaster University's L. R. Wilson Institute for Canadian History. His first book, Food Will Win the War: The Politics, Culture, and Science of Food on Canada's Home Front, was published in 2014 by UBC Press.Alden Mosshammer is Professor of History (Emeritus) at the University of California, San Diego. He has published several books and articles on ancient and medieval chronography. His most recent publications focus on the late antique and early medieval computus.Simon Naylor is Senior Lecturer in Historical Geography at the University of Glasgow. He is the author of Regionalizing Science: Placing Knowledges in Victorian England (Pickering & Chatto, 2010) and the coeditor of New Spaces of Exploration: Geographies of Discovery in the Twentieth Century (IB Tauris, 2010).Djoeke van Netten is Assistant Professor in Early Modern History at the University of Amsterdam. Her research interests include the dissemination and secretion of knowledge in the Dutch Republic and beyond.Han Nijdam is coordinator for Old Frisian at the Fryske Akademy (Frisian Academy) in Leeuwarden (Netherlands). His areas of research include Old Frisian law from a comparative perspective, compensation law, legal anthropology, and the implications of research in the behavioral sciences for the humanities.Karen Hunger Parshall is Professor of History and Mathematics at the University of Virginia. Her research focuses primarily on the history of science and mathematics in America and the history of nineteenth- and twentieth-century algebra. Her most recent book (coauthored with Victor Katz), Taming the Unknown: A History of Algebra from Antiquity to the Early Twentieth Century, was published by Princeton University Press in June 2014. In January 2013 she was named an Inaugural Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.Anne Pollock is an associate professor of science and technology studies at Georgia Tech. Her research examines biomedicine and culture, theories of race and gender, and how science and medicine are mobilized in social justice projects. She is the author of Medicating Race: Heart Disease and Durable Preoccupations with Difference (Duke University Press, 2012).Marcus Popplow is Head of the Department of History of Technology in the Institute of Philosophy, Literary Studies, and History of Science and Technology at the Technische Universität Berlin. His fields of interest include medieval and early modern technology in Europe, the history of technology-related knowledge, and the history of mobility.Albert Presas Puig lectures in the history of science at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona and has been a research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. His research interests focus on science and power, science in the European periphery, science and Francoism, and the history of nuclear energy.Megan Raby is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin. Her current book project, American Tropics: The Caribbean Roots of Biodiversity Science, examines how long-term place-based research in the tropics shaped ideas about species diversity in the twentieth century.Emily Redman is an assistant professor of the history of science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her work examines the political and cultural history of precollege mathematics curriculum reform in the United States.Nicky Reeves is Curator of Scientific and Medical History Collections at the Hunterian, University of Glasgow. He has published on interactions between the Royal Society, instrument makers, and the Greenwich Observatory in the eighteenth century, most recently in Rebekah Higgitt's edited volume Nevil Maskelyne: Astronomer Royal (London, 2014).Maria Rentetzi is an associate professor of history and sociology of science and technology at the National Technical University of Athens. Currently she is a Lise Meitner Fellow at the Institute for Philosophy, University of Vienna.Evelleen Richards is Honorary Professor, specializing in the history of evolutionary theory and the sociology of clinical trials, in the Unit for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sydney. Her major study of the history of sexual selection, Sexing Selection: Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection, is in press.Lissa L. Roberts is Professor of Long-Term Development of Science and Technology at the University of Twente. In addition to authoring and editing a broad range of studies in the history of science and technology, she currently serves as Editor of the journal History of Science.Julia Rodriguez is Associate Professor of History at the University of New Hampshire. She is the author of Civilizing Argentina: Science, Medicine, and the Modern State (UNC Press, 2006). A National Science Foundation CAREER Awardee (2007–2011), she is Editor of the open-source teaching website HOSLAC: History of Science in Latin America and the Caribbean (http://www.hoslac.org).Anna Marie Roos is Senior Lecturer at University of Lincoln and Fellow of both the Linnean Society and the Society of Antiquaries of London. Volume 1 of her edited and translated Correspondence of Martin Lister (1639–1712) was published in February 2015. She has written on the early modern history of science and medicine, as well as on scientific taxonomy.Thomas Le Roux is a researcher at the CNRS (French National Center for Scientific Research). His work deals with the impact of early industrialization on the environment from 1700 to 1850, including a comparison between Paris and London, as well as occupational health and industrial accidents. A recent publication is Le laboratoire des pollutions industrielles: Paris, 1770–1830 (Paris: Albin Michel, 2011).Robert W. Smith is Professor of History at the University of Alberta. His most recent book is Hubble's Cosmos (coauthored with David DeVorkin), published by National Geographic. He is completing a book on the history of large-scale science and coediting a special issue of Victorian Review on Alfred Russel Wallace.Stephen D. Snobelen is an associate professor in the History of Science and Technology Program at the University of King's College, Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is on the Editorial Board of the Newton Project, and his publications include studies of the relationship between Newton's science and religion.Emma C. Spary is a Reader in the Faculty of History, University of Cambridge. Her publications include Utopia's Garden (2000), Eating the Enlightenment (2012), and Feeding France (2014). She has also coedited several essay collections on the history of natural history, chemistry, medicine, and food.Thomas Stapleford is an associate professor in the Program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame, where he is also a member of the Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science. He studies the history of the human sciences, especially economics.Alexander I. Stingl is an instructor at Leuphana University of Lüneburg and a research consultant for the Institute for General Medicine, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg. He has authored numerous works, most recently, with Sabrina M. Weiss and Sal Restivo, Worlds of ScienceCraft (Ashgate, 2014), The Digital Coloniality of Power (Lexington, forthcoming), and Care, Power, Information (Routledge, forthcoming).Roger R. Thompson is a professor of history at Western Washington University. His current research projects include one on the introduction of telegraphy to China, with particular reference to the political, military, and diplomatic implications of the strategic networking of China in the period 1881–1901.Noémi Tousignant is a research associate at the Universities of Cambridge (Anthropologies of African Biosciences Research Group) and Montreal (Canada Research Chair in Healthcare Pluralism). Her work focuses on postcolonial science and public health in Senegal, particularly on memories of development research and the politics of toxicity and quality control.Anthony S. Travis is Deputy Director of the Sidney M. Edelstein Center for the History and Philosophy of Science, Technology, and Medicine at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has published extensively on the history of chemical technologies in Europe and the United States during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.Matteo Valleriani is a research group leader at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. His research focuses on the history of ancient and early modern mechanics and cosmology and on the interaction between practical and theoretical knowledge in the process of emergence of new scientific knowledge.Annemieke Verboon is a postdoctoral fellow at the Groupe d'Anthropologie Scolastique (CRH–LabEx HaStec) in Paris. She works on the history of the brain, cognition, and the soul at the intersection of theology, philosophy, and medicine, focusing on the textual and material culture of medieval and early modern Europe.Iain P. Watts completed his Ph.D. in 2015 in the History of Science Program at Princeton University, with a dissertation entitled “‘Current’ Events: Galvanism and the World of Scientific Information, 1790–1830.” He is now Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Puget Sound, where he teaches modern European history and the history of science and technology.Andrew Wear is an emeritus reader in history at University College London and a former member of the Wellcome Centre for the History of Medicine. His publications include Knowledge and Practice in English Medicine, 1550–1680, and, as coauthor, The Western Medical Tradition.Nadine Weidman is the author of Constructing Scientific Psychology: Karl Lashley's Mind-Brain Debates (Cambridge, 1999) and coauthor of Race, Racism, and Science (ABC-Clio, 2004). She is writing a history of scientific claims for a human aggression instinct and teaches history of science at Harvard University and Boston College.Elizabeth A. Williams is a professor of history at Oklahoma State University. She is the author of A Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier (2003); her research specialty is the history of medicine and the human sciences in modern Europe. She is completing a book on the science and medicine of appetite from 1750 to 1950.Mary P. Winsor is Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto's Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology. She wrote Reading the Shape of Nature: Comparative Zoology at the Agassiz Museum (1991), although “shape” is a bad metaphor for the taxonomic hierarchy. Find her latest work, “Considering Affinity: An Ethereal Conversation,” in Endeavour.Rebecca J. H. Woods is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Columbia University Society of Fellows in the Humanities. She is completing a book manuscript on livestock breeding in the British Empire and has published articles in the Agricultural History Review and Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.Timothy Yenter is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Mississippi. His work on early modern philosophy and theology has recently been published in the British Journal for the History of Philosophy, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.David E. Zitarelli is Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Temple University in Philadelphia. His latest works are an analysis of the mathematical papers by the colonial scientist David Rittenhouse and an account of the first hundred years of the Mathematical Association of America. Previous articleNext article DetailsFiguresReferencesCited by Isis Volume 106, Number 4December 2015 Publication of the History of Science Society Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/684808 © 2015 by The History of Science Society. All rights reserved.PDF download Crossref reports no articles citing this article.

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