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Introduction: Diversifying the historiography of bacteriophages Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-11-04 Neeraja Sankaran
The essays in this special issue draw on a bank of diverse primary and secondary sources in different languages, to offer novel perspectives on the different directions that research on or with bacteriophages—bacterial viruses—has evolved over the century since they were first discovered. Looking beyond the established historical accounts of the discovery of the bacteriophages and their role as a tool
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Afterword: Phage, history and historiography Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-11-04 William C. Summers
The papers in this special issue all touch on the broad problems of scientific credit and priority and the historiography of science. My remarks consider the deeper meaning of ‘discovery’, ‘priority’ and ‘scientific credit’, topics of interest to both the scientist and the historian, in light of the centenary of d'Herelle's paper and what became known as the ‘Twort–d'Herelle controversy’. The seminal
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What he may seem to the world: Isaac Newton's autograph book epigrams Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-05-27 George Gömöri; Stephen D. Snobelen
This paper identifies, describes and analyses Isaac Newton's known inscriptions in alba amicorum (autograph books). It begins with an introduction to the early modern autograph book and its social utility for travelling students. Each Newton inscription is contextualized with brief biographies of the individual album owners. The potential reasons for Newton's use of his chosen epigrams are considered
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The virus in the rivers: histories and antibiotic afterlives of the bacteriophage at the sangam in Allahabad Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-07-22 Rijul Kochhar
The confluence (sangam) of India's two major rivers, the Ganges and the Yamuna, is located in the city of Allahabad. Ritualistic dips in these river waters are revered for their believed curative power against infections, and salvation from the karmic cycles of birth and rebirth. The sacred and geographic propensities of the rivers have mythic valences in Hinduism and other religious traditions. Yet
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‘What he hath gather'd together shall not be lost’: remembering James Petiver Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-05-06 Richard Coulton
James Petiver FRS (ca 1663–1718) was a professional apothecary and prominent natural historian in London at the turn of the eighteenth century. This essay introduces a special issue of Notes and Records, ‘Remembering James Petiver’, marking the 300th anniversary of his death. Combining his known biography with new research, it accounts for Petiver's formation as urban apothecary and botanist, his emergence
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James Petiver's 1717 Papilionum Britanniae: an analysis of the first comprehensive account of British butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Richard I Vane-Wright
Although the contributions of James Petiver to the early development of systematic natural history are widely acknowledged, he is often criticized for scientific, curatorial and even social shortcomings. This rather dubious reputation is at odds with his standing among entomologists as ‘the father of British butterflies’. Shortly before his death in 1718, Petiver published a densely packed eight-page
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James Petiver's apothecary practice and the consumption of American drugs in early modern London Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Katrina Elizabeth Maydom
In the late seventeenth century, there was a boom in English imports of drugs from the Americas, such as sassafras, guaiacum and sarsaparilla. This was a result of a wider increase in colonial trade, the English acquisition of new drug-producing territories, such as Jamaica, and a broader trend towards greater medical consumption of drugs. How were these American drugs received in early modern English
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2019 Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar lectureLife begins at 40: the demographic and cultural roots of the midlife crisis. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-03-25 Mark Jackson
In 1965, the psychoanalyst and social scientist Elliott Jaques introduced a term, the ‘midlife crisis’, that continues to structure Western understandings and experiences of middle age. Following Jaques's work, the midlife crisis became a popular means of describing how—and why—men and women around the age of 40 became disillusioned with work, disenchanted with relationships and detached from family
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James Petiver's 'joynt-stock': middling agency in urban collecting networks. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-02-05 Alice Marples
This article explores the complexities of James Petiver and Hans Sloane's relationship with one another and their shared contacts, examining the ways in which their networks overlapped but also, crucially, differed from one another. It shows that, though they had common interests and institutional memberships, Petiver ultimately occupied a different urban world from Sloane, a middling, trade-orientated
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Creature features: The lively narratives of bacteriophages in Soviet biology and medicine Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-01-15 Dmitriy Myelnikov
The term ‘bacteriophage’ (devourer of bacteria) was coined by Félix d'Herelle in 1917 to describe both the phenomenon of spontaneous destruction of bacterial cultures and an agent responsible. Debates about the nature of bacteriophages raged in the 1920s and 1930s, and there were extensive attempts to use the phenomenon to fight infections. Whereas it eventually became a crucial tool for molecular
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Vladimir Sertić: forgotten pioneer of virology and bacteriophage therapy Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-01-08 Zdravko Lacković; Karlo Toljan
Vladimir Sertić was a pioneer of bacteriophage research in the period between the two world wars. He was born and educated in Croatia, where he made his initial discoveries, and joined Félix d'Herelle's Laboratoire du Bactériophage in Paris in 1928. Original documents and a box with hundreds of sealed bacteriophages samples were kept in Sertić's Zagreb home for decades. Following Vladimir's death,
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From obstacle to lynchpin: the evolution of the role of bacteriophage lysogeny in defining and understanding viruses Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2020-01-08 Gladys Kostyrka; Neeraja Sankaran
The phenomenon of bacteriophage lysogeny has played a vital role in understanding the nature of viruses more generally. Discovered in 1920, the phenomenon was first wielded by its discoverers as a challenge to the idea that bacteriophages might be autonomous infectious agents of exogenous origin, namely viruses. But by the 1950s, lysogeny had come to be understood as a key mechanism through which some
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‘The most common grass, rush, moss, fern, thistles, thorns or vilest weeds you can find’: James Petiver's plants Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2019-11-27 Charles E. Jarvis
The dried plant specimens painstakingly acquired by the London apothecary James Petiver (ca 1663–1718) from around the world constitute a substantial, but underappreciated, component of the vast herbarium of Sir Hans Sloane, now housed at London's Natural History Museum. Petiver was an observant field biologist whose own collecting was focused in south-east England. However, he also obtained specimens
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Joseph Banks and Charles Blagden: cultures of advancement in the scientific worlds of late eighteenth-century London and Paris. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2019-11-23 Hannah Wills
This paper explores the relationship between Joseph Banks, president of the Royal Society, and Charles Blagden, secretary to Banks and the Society between 1784 and 1797. Blagden is often referred to as one of Banks's key assistants, as a trusted adviser, collaborator and source of information. Yet, despite his significance, the nature of Blagden's association with Banks has not been explored in detail
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Charles Blagden's diary: Information management and British science in the eighteenth century. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2019-08-08 Hannah Wills
This paper examines the diary of Charles Blagden, physician and secretary of the Royal Society between 1784 and 1797. It argues that the form and content of Blagden's diary developed in response to manuscript genres from a variety of contexts, including the medical training that Blagden undertook at the start of his career, the genre of the commonplace book, and contemporary travel narratives. Blagden
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Casting life, casting death: connections between early modern anatomical corrosive preparations and artistic materials and techniques. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2019-04-03 Marieke M A Hendriksen
Although the historical connections between anatomy and the visual arts have been explored in quite some depth, especially in the cases of early modern anatomical drawing, sculpting, the making of wet preparations and wax modelling, the role of artistic techniques in the creation of corrosive preparations has received little attention thus far. This is remarkable, as there appear to be significant
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Cetacean citations and the covenant of iron. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-11-14 Jenny Bulstrode
By the early decades of the nineteenth century, with surveys established as the weapon of choice for the fiscal military state, their instrumentation provided a focal point for radical attacks on political establishments. This paper considers a notorious dispute over mastery of iron in the instrumentation of magnetic surveying that took place in the 1830s between an Admiralty committee and the Reverend
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Instrument provision and geographical science: the work of the Royal Geographical Society, 1830-ca 1930. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-10-10 Jane A Wess,Charles W J Withers
This paper examines the Royal Geographical Society's provision and management of scientific instruments to explorers and expeditions in the century following its foundation in 1830. Assessment of the Society's directives concerning appropriate scientific instruments for the conduct of geography reveals the emergence (slow and uneven) of policies concerning the assignment of instruments. From examination
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Towards a methodology for analysing nineteenth-century collecting journeys of science and empire, with Charles Darwin's activities in Tierra del Fuego as a case study. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-08-29 Janet Owen
The interests of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace in natural history and evolution took them to remote parts of the globe on hazardous, multi-sensory journeys that were ultimately about collecting. This paper introduces a methodology for exploring these complex experiences in more detail, informed by historical geography, anthropology, textual analysis and the geo-humanities. It involves looking
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Managing failure: Sir Peter Brian Medawar's transplantation research. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20 Hyung Wook Park
Sir Peter Medawar experimentally demonstrated immunological tolerance through his tissue transplantation experiment in the early and mid-1950s. He made a central contribution to modern biomedicine by showing that genetically distinct cells introduced into a body during its foetal phase could not only be permanently tolerated but also make the host accept any subsequent skin grafts from the original
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Living with, learning from and managing scientific failure. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20 Ben Marsden
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The FRS nomination of Sir Prafulla C. Ray and the correspondence of N. R. Dhar. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20 Arnab Rai Choudhuri,Rajinder Singh
Sir Prafulla Chandra Ray (1861-1944) was the first Indian chemist to achieve high international reputation. Originally trained at the University of Edinburgh, he worked for many years at Presidency College in Calcutta and then at Calcutta University. He built up a remarkable school of chemical research by attracting many outstanding students to work with him and published about 150 papers-many of them
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Seventeenth-Century 'double writing' schemes, and a 1676 letter in the phonetic script and real character of John Wilkins. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20 William Poole
Royal Society Classified Papers XVI contains a letter written in not one but two seemingly mysterious scripts. As a result, this letter has remained until now effectively illegible, and has been miscatalogued. These scripts are rare examples of the written forms devised by John Wilkins to accompany his proposals for an artificial language, published under the auspices of the Royal Society in 1668.
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Address of the president, Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, given at the anniversary meeting on 30 November 2017. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20
As always seems to be the case these days, this has been quite a year. Today, I want to explore some of the key issues facing the science community and the Society's engagement with them. They are: our future relationship with the EU, and more generally with other countries; science funding; and what is needed to make optimal use of funding.
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Rocks, skulls and materialism: geology and phrenology in late-Georgian Belfast. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2018-03-20 Jonathan Jeffrey Wright,Diarmid A Finnegan
Recent years have seen the development of a more nuanced understanding of the emergence of scientific naturalism in the nineteenth century. It has become apparent that scientific naturalism did not emerge sui generis in the years following the publication of Charles Darwin's On the origin of species (1859), but was present, if only in incipient form, much earlier in the century. Building on recent
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Science communications. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Ben Marsden
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The evolving spirit: morals and mutualism in Arabella Buckley's evolutionary epic. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Jordan Larsen
Contemporaries of Charles Darwin were divided on reconciling his theory of natural selection with religion and morality. Although Alfred Russel Wallace stands out as a spiritualist advocate of natural selection who rejected a natural origin of morality, the science popularizer and spiritualist Arabella Buckley (1840-1929) offers a more representative example of how theists, whether spiritualist or
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2016 Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar lecture The curious history of curiosity-driven research. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Jon Agar
Curiosity has a curious place in the history of science. In the early modern period, curiosity was doubled-edged: it was both a virtue, the spring for a 'love of truth', but also the source of human error and even personal corruption. In the twentieth century, curiosity had become an apparently uncomplicated motivation. Successful scientists, for example Nobel Prize winners in their lectures and biographies
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Censoring Huxley and Wilberforce: A new source for the meeting that the Athenaeum 'wisely softened down'. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Richard England
In mid July 1860, the Athenaeum published a summary of the discussions about Charles Darwin's theory that took place at the British Association meeting in Oxford. Its account omitted the famous exchange between Samuel Wilberforce, Bishop of Oxford, and Thomas Huxley, the rising man of science. A fuller report of the meeting was published a week later in a local weekly, the Oxford Chronicle, but this
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Charles Blagden in revolutionary America: two unpublished letters to John Lloyd. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Paul Frame
Prior to becoming a secretary of the Royal Society in 1784 Charles Blagden (bapt. 1748-d. 1820) served as a surgeon in the British army during the Revolutionary War in America. In the two unpublished letters of 1778 discussed here, Blagden provides his Welsh friend John Lloyd (1749-1815) with a vivid description of the current state of affairs in America, from a British perspective, and with insights
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The York buildings dragons: Desaguliers, Arbuthnot and attitudes towards the scientific community. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-12-20 Pat Rogers
The growing public awareness of natural philosophy and technology in the eighteenth century brought with it unintended consequences, including an enlarged space for satiric treatments of scientific issues, which have not always been recognized for what they are. A pamphlet entitled The York Buildings Dragons appeared in December 1725, with a second, augmented, edition in January 1726. It has generally
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Pesticides, pollution and the UK's silent spring, 1963-1964: Poison in the Garden of England. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 J F M Clark
Despite being characterized as 'one of the worst agricultural accidents in Britain in the 1960s', the 'Smarden incident' has never been subjected to a complete historical analysis. In 1963, a toxic waste spill in Kent coincided with the publication of the British edition of Rachel Carson's Silent spring. This essay argues that these events combined to 'galvanize' nascent toxic and environmental consciousness
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The Crimean War as a technological enterprise. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 Yakup Bektas
Discussions of the Crimean War (1853-56) often emphasize its leaders' military and political incompetence and logistic failures, which led to heavy losses both on the battlefield and to disease. This portrayal ignores the significant entrepreneurial and technological novelties that emerged from the war. Begun and fought for the most part along traditional lines, the Crimean War became a stage for the
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Robert Le Rossignol, 1884-1976: Engineer of the 'Haber' process. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 Deri Sheppard
In March 1908, the BASF at Ludwigshafen provided financial support to Fritz Haber in his attempt to synthesize ammonia from the elements. The process that now famously bears his name was demonstrated to BASF in July 1909. However, its engineer was Haber's private assistant, Robert Le Rossignol, a young British chemist from the Channel Islands with whom Haber made a generous financial arrangement regarding
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War, nature and technoscience. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 Ben Marsden
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Crime and hypnosis in fin-de-siècle Germany: the Czynski case. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Heather Wolffram
Lurid tales of the criminal use of hypnosis captured both popular and scholarly attention across Europe during the closing decades of the nineteenth century, culminating not only in the invention of fictional characters such as du Maurier's Svengali but also in heated debates between physicians over the possibilities of hypnotic crime and the application of hypnosis for forensic purposes. The scholarly
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A dangerous method? The German discourse on hypnotic suggestion therapy around 1900. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Andreas-Holger Maehle
In the late nineteenth century, German-speaking physicians and psychiatrists intensely debated the benefits and risks of treatment by hypnotic suggestion. While practitioners of the method sought to provide convincing evidence for its therapeutic efficacy in many medical conditions, especially nervous disorders, critics pointed to dangerous side effects, including the triggering of hysterical attacks
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From transnational to regional magnetic fevers: The making of a law on hypnotism in late nineteenth-century Belgium. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Kaat Wils
In May 1892, Belgium adopted a law on the exercise of hypnotism. The signing of the law constituted a temporary endpoint to six years of debate on the dangers and promises of hypnotism, a process of negotiation between medical doctors, members of parliament, legal professionals and lay practitioners. The terms of the debate were not very different from what happened elsewhere in Europe, where, since
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Between Charcot and Bernheim: The debate on hypnotism in fin-de-siècle Italy. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Maria Teresa Brancaccio
In the late 1870s, a small group of Italian psychiatrists became interested in hypnotism in the wake of the studies conducted by the French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot. Eager to engage in hypnotic research, these physicians referred to the scientific authority of French and German scientists in order to overcome the scepticism of the Italian medical community and establish hypnotism as a research
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Hypnosis lessons by stage magnetizers: Medical and lay hypnotists in Spain. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Andrea Graus
During the late nineteenth century, Spanish physicians had few chances to observe how hypnosis worked within a clinical context. However, they had abundant opportunities to watch lay hypnotizers in action during private demonstrations or on stage. Drawing on the exemplary cases of the magnetizers Alberto Santini Sgaluppi (a.k.a. Alberto Das) and Onofroff, in this paper I discuss the positive influence
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‘A portion of truth’: Demarcating the boundaries of scientific hypnotism in late nineteenth-century France. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Kim M Hajek
In fin-de-siècle France, hypnotism enjoyed an unprecedented level of medico-scientific legitimacy. Researchers studying hypnotism had nonetheless to manage relations between their new ‘science’ and its widely denigrated precursor, magnétisme animal, because too great a resemblance between the two could damage the reputation of ‘scientific’ hypnotism. They did so by engaging in the rhetorical activity
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History of hypnotism in Europe and the significance of place. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-06-20 Andreas-Holger Maehle,Heather Wolffram
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Charles Hutton and the 'Dissensions' of 1783-84: scientific networking and its failures. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 Benjamin Sutherland Wardhaugh
This paper proposes a fresh look at the 'Dissensions' that held up scientific business at the Royal Society during the spring of 1784. It focuses attention on the career and personal networks of Charles Hutton, whose dismissal from the role of Foreign Secretary ignited the row. It shows that the incident had no single cause but was the outcome of several factors that made Hutton intolerable to Joseph
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The Athenæum Club, the Royal Society and the reform of dentistry in nineteenth-century Britain: A research report. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 Malcolm G H Bishop
In 1978 M. J. Peterson examined the role played by the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) in nineteenth-century dental reform, noting the establishment of its Licence in Dental Surgery (LDS) in 1859. In a paper published in Notes and Records in 2010, the present author described the influential role played by Fellows of the Royal Society during the nineteenth-century campaign for dental reform led by
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Enlarging the bounds of moral philosophy: Why did Isaac Newton conclude the Opticks the way he did? Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 John Henry
This paper draws attention to the remarkable closing words of Isaac Newton's Optice (1706) and subsequent editions of the Opticks (1718, 1721), and tries to suggest why Newton chose to conclude his book with a puzzling allusion to his own unpublished conclusions about the history of religion. Newton suggests in this concluding passage that the bounds of moral philosophy will be enlarged as natural
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Observation, experiment or autonomy in the domestic sphere? Women's familiar science writing in Britain, 1790-1830. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 Eleanor Anne Peters
This paper examines three female writers who chose to affiliate their educational scientific works with the 'domestic sphere': Priscilla Wakefield, Jane Marcet and Maria Edgeworth. It shows that within what is now broadly categorized as 'familiar science', differing motivations for writing, publishing and reading existed. Between 1790 and 1830 many educationalists claimed that the best way for children
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Who cares about the history of science? Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 Hasok Chang
The history of science has many functions. Historians should consider how their work contributes to various functions, going beyond a simple desire to understand the past correctly. There are both internal and external functions of the history of science in relation to science itself; I focus here on the internal, as they tend to be neglected these days. The internal functions can be divided into orthodox
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John Webster, the Royal Society and The Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft (1677). Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2017-03-20 Michael Hunter
This paper publishes for the first time the dedication to the Royal Society that John Webster wrote for his Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft (1677), but which failed to appear in the published work. It also investigates the circumstances in which the book received the Royal Society's imprimatur, in the light of the Society's ambivalent attitude towards witchcraft and related phenomena in its early
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The ‘pay-to-publish’ model should be abolished. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Raghavendra Gadagkar
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Engaging civil society with health research. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Mary Madden
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The future of scientific periodicals: A librarian's perspective. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Stella Butler
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The disruptive potential of data publication. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Sabina Leonelli
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How has publishing changed in the last twenty years? Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Sunetra Gupta
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Science publishing 2035. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Rebekah Higgitt
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Rescaling scientific communication. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Mark Patterson
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Communities need journals. Notes Rec. Royal Soc. J. History of Sci. (IF 0.372) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Cameron Neylon