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Evan R. Ragland [3]Evan Ragland [3]
  1.  18
    “Making Trials” in Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century European Academic Medicine.Evan R. Ragland - 2017 - Isis 108 (3):503-528.
    Throughout the sixteenth century, learned physicians across Europe performed a diverse array of “trials” of phenomena and published reports about them. This essay traces the phrase “periculum facere” (“to make a trial”) and related terms through natural history investigations, drug testing, chymical analysis, and anatomical discoveries. Physicians used ancient precedents, their learned expertise, and pedagogical authority to anchor the epistemic status of their trials and incorporated the historical narratives of their trial-making within arguments to factual and causal knowledge, even philosophical (...)
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  2.  26
    Early Modern Medicine and Natural Philosophy.Peter Distelzweig, Evan Ragland & Benjamin Goldberg (eds.) - 2016 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    This essay discusses the role of new mechanical devices put forward in the seventeenth century in anatomy and pathology, showing how several of those devices were promptly deployed in anatomical investigations. I also discuss the role of dead bodies as boundary objects between living bodies and machines, highlighting their problematic status in experimentation and vivisection.
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  3.  36
    Experimenting with Chymical Bodies: Reinier de Graaf's Investigations of the Pancreas.Evan Ragland - 2008 - Early Science and Medicine 13 (6):615-664.
    In the late seventeenth century, traditions in anatomy and chymistry came together to ground new theoretical and experimental approaches to understanding the animal body. The researches of Dutch experimenters Reinier de Graaf and his mentor Franciscus Sylvius provide keen insight into the ways experiments were constructed, negotiated, and thought about by leading anatomists and physicians of the time. The objects and approaches de Graaf used in the laboratory—ligature, inflation, injection, tubes, vessels, tasting—were derived from broadly Harveian anatomical and Helmontian chymical (...)
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  4.  7
    Michael Stolberg. Uroscopy in Early Modern Europe. Translated by Logan Kennedy and Leonhard Unglaub. x + 196 pp., figs., illus., bibl., index. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2015. £70. [REVIEW]Evan R. Ragland - 2017 - Isis 108 (4):892-893.
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    Ohad Nachtomy;, Justin E. H. Smith . The Life Sciences in Early Modern Philosophy. xiii + 256 pp., illus., indexes. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. $74. [REVIEW]Evan Ragland - 2015 - Isis 106 (2):438-439.
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