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  1. Teleology without regrets. The transformation of physiology in Germany: 1790–1847.Timothy Lenoir - 1981 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 12 (4):293-354.
  • Paper Tools In Experimental Cultures.Ursula Klein - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 32 (2):265-302.
    The paper studies various functions of Berzelian formulas in European organic chemistry prior to the mid-nineteenth century from a semiotic, historical and epistemological perspective. I argue that chemists applied Berzelian formulas as productive ‘paper tools’ for creating a chemical order in the ‘jungle’ of organic chemistry. Beginning in the late 1820s, chemists applied chemical formulas to build models of the binary constitution of organic compounds in analogy to inorganic compounds. Based on these formula models, they constructed new classifications of organic (...)
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  • Shifting Ontologies, Changing Classifications: plant materials from 1700 to 1830.Ursula Klein - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 36 (2):261-329.
    This paper studies European chemists’ shifting ontologies of materials by comparing the ways in which they classified materials. The focus is on plant materials, their different identities, and the changing ways chemists sorted out and ordered plant materials in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The main goals of the paper are to follow the development of plant materials from ordinary, everyday materials and commodities in the early eighteenth century to purified carbon compounds and organic substances familiar only to experts (...)
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  • Bibliography on philosophy of chemistry.E. R. Scerri - 1997 - Synthese 111 (3):305-324.
    The term philosophy of chemistry is here construed broadly to include some publications from the history of chemistry and chemical education. Of course this initial selection of material has inevitably been biased by the interests of the author. This bibliography supersedes that of van Brakel and Vermeeren (1981), although no attempt has been made to include every single one of their entries, especially in languages other than English. Also, readers interested particularly in articles in German may wish to consult the (...)
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  • Kekulé, Butlerov, and the Historiography of the Theory of Chemical Structure.A. J. Rocke - 1981 - British Journal for the History of Science 14 (1):27-57.
    In 1858, August Kekulé and Archibald Scott Couper independently published similar ideas regarding the tetravalence and self-linking ability of carbon atoms; three years later, the Russian chemist Aleksandr Mikhailovich Butlerov read a paper at the German Naturforscherversammlung in Speyer, which restated, clarified, and enlarged upon the ideas of Kekulé and Couper. In 1958, the centenary of the structure theory was celebrated in Chicago, London, Heidelberg, and Ghent; the celebrations in Moscow, Frunze, and Kazan took place three years later. For over (...)
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  • A research school of chemistry in the nineteenth century: Jean Baptiste Dumas and his research students: Part I.Leo Klosterman - 1985 - Annals of Science 42 (1):1-40.
    Jean Baptiste Dumas, an outstanding research chemist and teacher, laid the foundations of the science of organic chemistry. While doing so, he gathered around him some thirty students who participated in his research programmes and for the most part worked in his laboratory, thus forming a laboratory-based research school of chemists. Several of these in their turn influenced the development of the science. In Part I the social and institutional aspects of the school were considered. The discussion in Part II (...)
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  • Bio-Science between experiment and ideology, 1835–1850.Eduard Glas - 1983 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 14 (1):39-57.
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  • Avogadro's Hypothesis and its Fate: A Case-Study in the Failure of Case-Studies.John Hedley Brooke - 1981 - History of Science 19 (4):235-273.
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