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    Charles Bell’s seeing hand: Teaching anatomy to the senses in Britain, 1750–1840.Carin Berkowitz - 2014 - History of Science 52 (4):377-400.
    Charles Bell’s Bridgewater Treatise on the hand should be read as elaborating philosophies of pedagogy and the senses, and as fitting with Bell’s work on the nervous system. In The Hand, Bell argues that sensory reception must be coupled with muscular action to establish true knowledge, elevating the ‘doing’ hand to epistemological parity with the long-superior ‘seeing’ eye. Knowledge in anatomy was typically couched in terms to do with sight and depiction; but according to Bell, anatomy simply could not teach (...)
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  2. Voting Machinery, Counting and Public Proofs in the 2000 US Presidential Election.Michael Lynch, Stephen Hilgartner & Carin Berkowitz - 2005 - In Bruno Latour & Peter Weibel (eds.), Making Things Public. MIT Press. pp. 814--25.
     
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    Andrew Cunningham, The Anatomist Anatomis'd: An Experimental Discipline in Enlightenment Europe. Farnham: Ashgate, 2010. Pp. xxiv+443. ISBN 978-0-7546-6338-6. £65.00. [REVIEW]Carin Berkowitz - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (2):291-293.