6 found
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  1.  14
    Managing the future: The Special Virus Leukemia Program and the acceleration of biomedical research.Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 48 (PB):231-249.
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  2.  21
    The Power of Exercise and the Exercise of Power: The Harvard Fatigue Laboratory, Distance Running, and the Disappearance of Work, 1919–1947.Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2015 - Journal of the History of Biology 48 (3):391-423.
    In the early twentieth century, fatigue research marked an area of conflicting scientific, industrial, and cultural understandings of working bodies. These different understandings of the working body marked a key site of political conflict during the growth of industrial capitalism. Many fatigue researchers understood fatigue to be a physiological fact and allied themselves with Progressive-era reformers in urging industrial regulation. Opposed to these researchers were advocates of Taylorism and scientific management, who held that fatigue was a mental event and that (...)
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  3.  16
    Following cancer viruses through the laboratory, clinic, and society.Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 48:185-188.
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  4.  29
    Interests and instrument: a micro-history of object Wh.3469.Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2009 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 40 (4):396-404.
    This paper presents a micro-history of an object in the collection of the Whipple Museum of the History of Science, with an emphasis on how Wh.3469 reflects a hybrid of two different interwar British X-ray crystallographic communities, namely those based in WL Bragg’s physics laboratory at the Victoria University of Manchester and the Crystallographic Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. It explores connections between Wh.3469’s final design and construction and the different interests each community had in X-ray crystallography.Keywords: Powder camera; (...)
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  5.  19
    Doogab Yi. The Recombinant University: Genetic Engineering and the Emergence of Stanford Biotechnology. xi + 318 pp., illus., figs., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2015. $40. [REVIEW]Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2016 - Isis 107 (2):447-448.
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  6.  17
    Stephen Hilgartner, Reordering Life: Knowledge and Control in the Genomics Revolution , 368 pp., $35.00 Hardcover ISBN: 9780262035866. [REVIEW]Robin Wolfe Scheffler - 2018 - Journal of the History of Biology 51 (4):879-881.