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      Book

      Companion to the History of Modern Science
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      Book

      Companion to the History of Modern Science

      DOI link for Companion to the History of Modern Science

      Companion to the History of Modern Science book

      Companion to the History of Modern Science

      DOI link for Companion to the History of Modern Science

      Companion to the History of Modern Science book

      Edited ByR. C. Olby, G. N. Cantor, J. R. R. Christie, M. J. S. Hodge
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1990
      eBook Published 8 October 2020
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003070818
      Pages 1108
      eBook ISBN 9781003070818
      Subjects Humanities, Reference & Information Science
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      Olby, R.C., Cantor, G.N., Christie, J.R.R., & Hodge, M.J.S. (Eds.). (1990). Companion to the History of Modern Science (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003070818

      ABSTRACT

      The 67 chapters of this book describe and analyse the development of Western science from 1500 to the present day. Divided into two major sections - 'The Study of the History of Science' and 'Selected Writings in the History of Science' - the volume describes the methods and problems of research in the field and then applies these techniques to a wide range of fields.
      Areas covered include:
      * the Copernican Revolution
      * Genetics
      * Science and Imperialism
      * the History of Anthropology
      * Science and Religion
      * Magic and Science.
      The companion is an indispensable resource for students and professionals in History, Philosophy, Sociology and the Sciences as well as the History of Science. It will also appeal to the general reader interested in an introduction to the subject.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part Part I|195 pages

      section Section IA|71 pages

      History of Science in Relation to Neighbouring Disciplines

      chapter 1|18 pages

      The Development of the Historiography of Science

      ByJohn R. R. Christie

      chapter 2|9 pages

      The History of Science and the Working Scientist

      ByJohn R. G. Turner

      chapter 3|15 pages

      The History of Science and the History of Society

      ByRoy Porter

      chapter 4|13 pages

      The History of Science and The Philosophy of Science

      ByLarry Laudan

      chapter 5|14 pages

      Sociological Theories of Scientific Knowledge

      ByBarry Barnes

      section Section IB|49 pages

      Analytical Perspectives

      chapter 6|10 pages

      Marxism and the History of Science

      ByRobert M. Young

      chapter 7|13 pages

      The Sociology of the Scientific Community

      ByTrevor Pinch

      chapter 8|10 pages

      Feminism and the History of Science

      ByJ. R. R. Christie

      chapter 9|14 pages

      Language, Discourse and Science

      ByJ. V. Golinski

      section Section IC|71 pages

      Philosophical Problems

      chapter 10|21 pages

      Continental Philosophy and the History of Science

      ByGary Gutting

      chapter 11|18 pages

      Discovery

      ByThomas Nickles

      chapter 12|15 pages

      Rationality, Science and History

      ByLarry Briskman

      chapter 13|15 pages

      Realism

      ByW. H. Newton-Smith

      part Part II|847 pages

      Selected Writings in the History of Science

      section Section IIA|355 pages

      Turning Points

      chapter 14|16 pages

      The Copernican Revolution

      ByJ. R. Ravetz

      chapter 15|26 pages

      The Scientific Revolution

      ByJohn A. Schuster

      chapter 16|21 pages

      Newton and Natural Philosophy

      ByAlan Gabbey

      chapter 17|14 pages

      The Chemical Revolution

      ByCarleton E. Perrin

      chapter 18|17 pages

      Laplacian Physics

      ByRobert Fox

      chapter 19|19 pages

      Natural History, 1670–1802

      ByPhillip R. Sloan

      chapter 20|12 pages

      The History of Geology, 1780–1840

      ByRachel Laudan

      chapter 21|16 pages

      Energy

      ByCrosbie Smith

      chapter 22|15 pages

      Electromagnetic Theory in the Nineteenth Century

      ByM. Norton Wise

      chapter 23|17 pages

      Cell Theory and Development

      ByJane Maienschein

      chapter 24|22 pages

      Origins and Species Before and After Darwin

      ByM. J. S. Hodge

      chapter 25|14 pages

      Wilhelm Wundt and the Emergence of Experimental Psychology

      ByK. Danziger

      chapter 26|15 pages

      Behaviourism

      ByRoger Smith

      chapter 27|17 pages

      Freud and Psychoanalysis

      ByRaymond E. Fancher

      chapter 28|16 pages

      The Theory of Relativity

      ByJohn Stachel

      chapter 29|21 pages

      Quantum Theory

      ByMichael Redhead

      chapter 30|15 pages

      Classical Economics and the Keynesian Revolution

      ByBill Gerrard

      chapter 31|9 pages

      From Physiology to Biochemistry

      ByNeil Morgan

      chapter 32|18 pages

      The Molecular Revolution in Biology

      ByRobert Olby

      chapter 33|16 pages

      The Emergence of Genetics

      ByRobert Olby

      chapter 34|17 pages

      Cybernetics and Information Technology

      ByMichael S. Mahoney

      section Section IIB|206 pages

      Topics and Interpretations

      chapter 35|11 pages

      Aristotelian Science

      ByA. George Molland

      chapter 36|15 pages

      The Heart and Blood from Vesalius to Harvey

      ByAndrew Wear

      chapter 37|14 pages

      Magic and Science in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

      ByJohn Henry

      chapter 38|13 pages

      Atomism and the Mechanical Philosophy

      ByMartin Tamny

      chapter 39|17 pages

      Newtonianism

      BySimon Schaffer

      chapter 40|12 pages

      Physical Optics

      ByG. N. Cantor

      chapter 41|12 pages

      Cosmology: Newton to Einstein

      ByPierre Kerszberg

      chapter 42|10 pages

      Geometry and Space

      ByJ. J. Gray

      chapter 43|16 pages

      Particle Science

      ByHelge Kragh

      chapter 44|13 pages

      The Foundations of Mathematics

      ByPhilip Kitcher

      chapter 45|12 pages

      Probability and Determinism, 1650–1900

      ByIan Hacking

      chapter 46|10 pages

      The Mind–Body Problem

      ByRobert M. Young

      chapter 47|16 pages

      Paradigmatic Traditions in the History of Anthropology

      ByGeorge W. Stocking

      chapter 48|15 pages

      Physiology and Experimental Medicine

      ByJohn V. Pickstone

      chapter 49|18 pages

      Geography

      ByDavid N. Livingstone

      section Section IIC|281 pages

      Themes

      chapter 50|20 pages

      Science and Religion

      ByJohn Hedley Brooke

      chapter 51|16 pages

      Science and Literature

      ByGillian Beer

      chapter 52|17 pages

      Science and Philosophy

      ByGeorge Macdonald Ross

      chapter 53|22 pages

      The Development of Philosophy of Science 1600–1900

      ByErnan McMullin

      chapter 54|15 pages

      The Development of Philosophy of Science Since 1900

      ByM. J. S. Hodge, G. N. Cantor

      chapter 55|16 pages

      The Classification of the Sciences

      ByNicholas Fisher

      chapter 56|17 pages

      Marginal Science

      BySeymour H. Mauskopf

      chapter 57|12 pages

      Science, Alienation and Oppression

      ByRobert M. Young

      chapter 58|11 pages

      Orthodoxies, Critiques and Alternatives

      ByJ. R. Ravetz

      chapter 59|11 pages

      Nationalism and Internationalism

      ByBrigitte Schroeder-Gudehus

      chapter 60|14 pages

      Science and Imperialism

      ByLewis Pyenson

      chapter 61|12 pages

      Science and War

      ByD. E. H. Edgerton

      chapter 62|14 pages

      Science Education

      ByW. H. Brock

      chapter 63|20 pages

      The Organisation of Science and Its Pursuit in Early Modern Europe

      ByRoger L. Emerson

      chapter 64|10 pages

      Professionalisation

      ByJ. B. Morrell

      chapter 65|18 pages

      Science and the Public

      BySteven Shapin

      chapter 66|16 pages

      Science and Political Ideology, 1790–1848

      ByDorinda Outram

      chapter 67|20 pages

      Natural Science and Social Theory

      ByTheodore M. Porter
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