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  1. Cognitive Foundations of Natural History: Towards an Anthropology of Science.[author unknown] - 1991 - Journal of the History of Biology 24 (3):537-540.
     
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  • Sciences and the Global: On Methods, Questions, and Theory.Sujit Sivasundaram - 2010 - Isis 101:146-158.
  • Sciences and the Global: On Methods, Questions, and Theory.Sujit Sivasundaram - 2010 - Isis 101 (1):146-158.
  • Knowledge in Transit.James A. Secord - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):654-672.
    What big questions and large‐scale narratives give coherence to the history of science? From the late 1970s onward, the field has been transformed through a stress on practice and fresh perspectives from gender studies, the sociology of knowledge, and work on a greatly expanded range of practitioners and cultures. Yet these developments, although long overdue and clearly beneficial, have been accompanied by fragmentation and loss of direction. This essay suggests that the narrative frameworks used by historians of science need to (...)
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  • Knowledge in Transit.James A. Secord - 2004 - Isis 95 (4):654-672.
    What big questions and large‐scale narratives give coherence to the history of science? From the late 1970s onward, the field has been transformed through a stress on practice and fresh perspectives from gender studies, the sociology of knowledge, and work on a greatly expanded range of practitioners and cultures. Yet these developments, although long overdue and clearly beneficial, have been accompanied by fragmentation and loss of direction. This essay suggests that the narrative frameworks used by historians of science need to (...)
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  • ‘Le centre de toutes choses’: Constructing and managing centralization on the Isle de France.Lissa Roberts - 2014 - History of Science 52 (3):319-342.
    In their recent book The colonial machine, James McClellan III and François Regourd detail how ancien regime France’s government marshalled science in the service of colonial expansion. By focusing on the local and long distance struggles to make the Isle de France a globally significant centre during the long eighteenth century, this essay suggests an alternative to McClellan and Regourd’s geography of metropolitan centre and colonial periphery, as well as their claim that the investigation of nature was tied to colonial (...)
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  • Assembling the dodo in early modern natural history.Natalie Lawrence - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (3):387-408.
    This paper explores the assimilation of the flightless dodo into early modern natural history. The dodo was first described by Dutch sailors landing on Mauritius in 1598, and became extinct in the 1680s or 1690s. Despite this brief period of encounter, the bird was a popular subject in natural-history works and a range of other genres. The dodo will be used here as a counterexample to the historical narratives of taxonomic crisis and abrupt shifts in natural history caused by exotic (...)
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  • Ex epistulis Philippinensibus: Georg Joseph Kamel SJ (1661-1706) and His Correspondence Network.Sebestian Kroupa - 2015 - Centaurus 57 (4):229-259.
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  • Reputation in a box. Objects, communication and trust in late 18th-century botanical networks.Sarah Easterby-Smith - 2015 - History of Science 53 (2):180-208.
    This paper examines how and why information moved or failed to move within transatlantic botanical networks in the late eighteenth century. It addresses the problem of how practitioners created relationships of trust, and the difficulties they faced in transferring reputations between national contexts. Eighteenth-century botany was characteristically cross-cultural, cosmopolitan and socially diverse, yet in the 1770s and 1780s the American Revolutionary Wars placed these attributes under strain. The paper analyses the British and French networks that surrounded the Philadelphian plant hunter (...)
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  • " Refer to folio and number": Encyclopedias, the Exchange of Curiosities, and Practices of Identification before Linnaeus.Dániel Margócsy - 2010 - Journal of the History of Ideas 71 (1):63-89.
    The Swiss natural historian Johann Amman came to Russia in 1733 to take a position as professor of botany and natural history at the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. As part of the job, he corresponded, and exchanged plant specimens, with the English merchant collector Peter Collinson in London, and the Swedish scholar Carolus Linnaeus, among others. After briefly reviewing Amman's correspondence with these scholars and the growing commerce in exotic specimens of natural history, I explore how encyclopedias came to (...)
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  • On Machines, Self-Organization, and the Global Traveling of Knowledge, circa 1500–1900.Karel Davids - 2015 - Isis 106 (4):866-874.
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  • The Genesis of ‘Useful Knowledge’.M. Berg - 2007 - History of Science 45 (2):123-133.
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  • Plants and Empire: Colonial Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World.Londa Schiebinger - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (1):203-205.
  • Colonial Botany: Science, Commerce, and Politics in the Early Modern World.Londa Schiebinger & Claudia Swan - 2005 - Journal of the History of Biology 38 (3):639-641.
  • Green Imperialism: Colonial Expansion, Tropical Island Edens, and the Origins of Environmentalism, 1600-1860.Richard H. Grove & Michael A. Osborne - 1995 - Journal of the History of Biology 28 (3):533-543.
     
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