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  1. Utility and Audience in Eighteenth-Century Chemistry: Case Studies of William Cullen and Joseph Priestley.J. V. Golinski - 1988 - British Journal for the History of Science 21 (1):1-31.
    Historians of science are less inclined now than they were a few years ago to regard chemistry as having sprung full-grown from the mind of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier. Many of the contours of pre-Lavoisierian chemistry have recently been mapped, its Newtonian and Stahlian theoretical traditions have been delineated, and the degree of coherence enforced on the subject by its didactic role has been argued. In addition, the social prominence and cohesion achieved by chemists in various national contexts, such as France, Scotland (...)
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  • Francis Bacon and the ‘vexations of art’: experimentation as intervention.Carolyn Merchant - 2013 - British Journal for the History of Science 46 (4):551-599.
    Francis Bacon's concept of the ‘vexations of art’ entailed experimentation as an intervention into nature for the purpose of extracting its secrets. Although the standard edition of Bacon's works by Spedding, Ellis and Heath and the new Oxford edition by Graham Rees translate the phrase vexationes artium as the ‘vexations of art’, a significant number of scholars, translators and editors from the seventeenth century to the present have read Bacon's Latin as the ‘torment’ or ‘tortures of art’. Here I discuss (...)
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  • Relations and Rivalry: Interactions between Britain and the Netherlands in Eighteenth-Century Science and Technology.Trevor H. Levere - 1970 - History of Science 9 (1):42-53.
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