Results for '“popular science”'

974 found
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  1.  35
    Popular science periodicals in Paris and London: The emergence of a low scientific culture, 1820–1875.Susan Sheets-Pyenson - 1985 - Annals of Science 42 (6):549-572.
    Efforts to diffuse useful knowledge on the part of dedicated social reformers, enterprising publishers, and vigorous voluntary associations created new forms of popular literature in the urban centres of Paris and London during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Popular science periodicals, especially, embodied the aims of the advocates of cheap literature, by providing ‘improving’ information at prices low enough to reach readers who might otherwise purchase potentially dangerous political tracts. Besides promoting social stability, popular science periodicals served to (...)
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  2.  29
    Popular Science, Pragmatism, and Conceptual Clarity.Oliver Belas - 2014 - European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 6 (1).
    Introduction One of popular science’s primary functions is to make what would otherwise be inaccessible, specialist knowledge accessible to the lay reader. But popular science puts its imagined reader in something of a dilemma, for one does not have to look very far to find bitter argument among science writers; argument that takes place beyond the limits of the scientific community: witness the ill-tempered exchanges between Mary Midgley and Richard Dawkins in the journal Philosophy in the l...
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  3.  34
    Popular Science and Politics in Interwar France.Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):459-471.
    ArgumentThe interwar period in France is characterized by intense activity to disseminate science in society through various media: magazines, conferences, book series, encyclopedias, radio, exhibitions, and museums. In this context, the scientific community developed significant attempts to disseminate science in close alliance with the State. This paper presents three ambitious projects conducted in the 1930s which targeted different audiences and engaged the social sciences along with the natural sciences. The first project was a multimedia enterprise aimed at bridging what would (...)
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  4. Communicating Popular Science: From Deficit to Democracy.[author unknown] - 2013
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  5.  24
    Popular Science in the Victorian Periodical.William H. Brock - 2005 - Minerva 43 (3):319-323.
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  6.  17
    Understanding popular science.Peter Broks - 2006 - New York: Open University Press.
    Science is a defining feature of the modern world, and popular science is where most of us make sense of that fact. Understanding Popular Science provides a framework to help understand the development of popular science and current debates about it. In a lively and accessible style, Peter Broks shows how popular science has been invented, redefined and fought over. From early-nineteenth century radical science to twenty-first century government initiatives, he examines popular science as an arena where the authority of (...)
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  7.  31
    Popular Science in National and Transnational Perspective: Suggestions from the American Context.Katherine Pandora - 2009 - Isis 100 (2):346-358.
    ABSTRACT In what ways can the study of science and popular culture in the American context contribute to ongoing debates on popularization and popular science? This essay suggests that, for several reasons, attention to the antebellum era offers the most significant opportunity to realize more sophisticated understandings of science in American popular culture. First, it enables us to take advantage of comparative opportunities, both by benefiting from the advanced state of historiography for Victorian popular science and by engaging with a (...)
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  8.  27
    Popular Science to Professional Science.Michael Ruse - 2013 - In Massimo Pigliucci & Maarten Boudry (eds.), Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem. University of Chicago Press. pp. 225.
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  9.  22
    Popularizing Science and Technology in the European Periphery, 1800–2000.Rachel Dunn - 2013 - Annals of Science 70 (4):590-593.
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  10.  13
    The Best Popular Science.Gregory Schrempp - 2022 - Spontaneous Generations 10 (1):22-26.
    Strategies of persuasion tapped in popular science writing are discussed under the assumption that effective science education and communication can offer antidotes to the revolt against expertise. It is argued that popular science can weaken the experience of science even while attempting to enhance it. Topics discussed include gimmickry, efforts at science-art fusions, and other contemporary mythologizing moves as well as the relationship between science and the humanities generally. Steven Weinberg’s modern classic The First Three Minutes is explored as an (...)
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  11.  46
    Just before Nature: The purposes of science and the purposes of popularization in some English popular science journals of the 1860s.Ruth Barton - 1998 - Annals of Science 55 (1):1-33.
    Summary Popular science journalism flourished in the 1860s in England, with many new journals being projected. The time was ripe, Victorian men of science believed, for an ?organ of science? to provide a means of communication between specialties, and between men of science and the public. New formats were tried as new purposes emerged. Popular science journalism became less recreational and educational. Editorial commentary and reviewing the progress of science became more important. The analysis here emphasizes those aspects of popular (...)
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  12.  42
    Complicating the Story of Popular Science: John Maynard Smith’s “Little Penguin” on The Theory of Evolution.Helen Piel - 2019 - Journal of the History of Biology 52 (3):371-390.
    Popular science writing has received increasing interest, especially in its relation to professional science. I extend the current scholarly focus from the nineteenth to the twentieth century by providing a microhistory of the early popular writings of evolutionary biologist John Maynard Smith. Linking them to the state of evolutionary biology as a professional science as well as Maynard Smith’s own professional standing, I examine the interplay between author, text and audiences. In particular, I focus on Maynard Smith’s book The Theory (...)
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  13.  13
    The scientific sublime: popular science unravels the mysteries of the universe.Alan G. Gross - 2018 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    The sublime evokes our awe, our terror, and our wonder. Applied first in ancient Greece to the heights of literary expression, in the 18th-century the sublime was extended to nature and to the sciences, enterprises that viewed the natural world as a manifestation of God's goodness, power, and wisdom. In The Scientific Sublime, Alan Gross reveals the modern-day sublime in popular science. He shows how the great popular scientists of our time--Richard Feynman, Stephen Hawking, Steven Weinberg, Brian Greene, Lisa Randall, (...)
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  14.  7
    Burnham, Popular Science, and Popularization.Nadine Weidman - 2019 - Isis 110 (4):758-761.
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  15.  25
    Popular Science in Eighteenth Century Almanacs: The Editorial Career of Henry Andrews of Royston, 1780–1820.Jennifer C. Mori - 2016 - History of Science 54 (1):19-44.
    English popular science was more than a mid-nineteenth century phenomenon, whether defined as practical, utilitarian and comprehensible knowledge, or as a nexus of ¡deas, rhetoric and practice. All these criteria were fulfilled in four Stationers’ Company almanacs for forty years by Henry Andrews, an astronomer, mathematician, astrologer and meteorologist. Andrews employed these as instruments for an extensive campaign in the history of science education devised to acquaint working class readers with the key figures, ideas and methodologies of science.
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  16.  40
    Popular Science Magazines in Interwar Britain: Authors and Readerships.Peter J. Bowler - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):437-457.
    ArgumentThis article is based on a detailed survey of three British popular science magazines published during the interwar years. It focuses on the authors who wrote for the magazines, using the information to analyze the ways in which scientists and popular writers contributed to the dissemination of information about science and technology. It shows how the different readerships toward which the magazines were directed determined the proportion of trained scientists who provided material for publication. The most serious magazine,Discovery, featured almost (...)
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  17. Science and Scientism in Popular Science Writing.Jeroen De Ridder - 2014 - Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 3 (12):23–39.
    If one is to believe recent popular scientific accounts of developments in physics, biology, neuroscience, and cognitive science, most of the perennial philosophical questions have been wrested from the hands of philosophers by now, only to be resolved (or sometimes dissolved) by contemporary science. To mention but a few examples of issues that science has now allegedly dealt with: the origin and destiny of the universe, the origin of human life, the soul, free will, morality, and religion. My aim in (...)
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  18. Popular science as knowledge: early modern Iberian-American repertorios de los tiempos.S. Orozco-Echeverri - 2023 - Galilaeana 20 (1):34-61.
    Iberian repertorios de los tiempos stemmed from Medieval almanacs and calendars. During the sixteenth century significant editorial, conceptual and material changes in repertorios incorporated astronomy, geography, chronology and natural philosophy. From De Li’s Repertorio (1492) to Zamorano’s Cronología (1585), the genre evolved from simple almanacs to more complex cosmological works which circulated throughout the Iberian-American world. This article claims that repertorios are a form of syncretic knowledge rather than “popular science” by relying on the concept of “knowledge in transit”. Elaborating (...)
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  19.  61
    Popular Science as Cultural Dispositif: On the German Way of Science Communication in the Twentieth Century.Arne Schirrmacher - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):473-508.
    ArgumentGerman twentieth-century history is characterized by stark changes in the political system and the momentous consequences of World Wars I and II. However, instead of uncovering specific kinds or periods of “Kaiserreich science,” “Weimar science,” or “Nazi science” together with their public manifestations and in such a way observing a narrow link between popular science and political orders, this paper tries to exhibit some remarkable stability and continuity in popular science on a longer scale. Thanks to the rich German history (...)
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  20.  21
    Ernst Mach’s Popular Science.Zachary Barr - 2023 - Isis 114 (3):559-577.
    This essay examines the physicist Ernst Mach’s popular work. Like many other scientists in late nineteenth-century Central Europe, he viewed the popular genre as a means not only of edifying the lay public but of communicating arguments to other specialists. In many cases, he used his popularizations to draw his colleagues’ attention to the biological and evolutionary features of scientific reasoning, although his own understanding of those features changed in the 1880s and early 1890s. Notably, he came to believe that (...)
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  21.  31
    Popular science and the arts: challenges to cultural authority in France under the Second Empire.Maurice Crosland - 2001 - British Journal for the History of Science 34 (3):301-322.
    The National Institute of Science and the Arts, founded in 1795, consists of parallel academies, concerned with science, literature, the visual arts and so on. In the nineteenth century it represented a unique government-sponsored intellectual authority and a supreme court judgement, a power which came to be resented by innovators of all kinds. The Académie des sciences held a virtual monopoly in representing French science but soon this came to be challenged. In the period of the Second Empire we find (...)
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  22.  26
    The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in Nineteenth-Century BritainRoger Cooter.Theodore Porter - 1986 - Isis 77 (2):381-383.
  23.  38
    Presidential address Experts and publishers: writing popular science in early twentieth-century Britain, writing popular history of science now.Peter Bowler - 2006 - British Journal for the History of Science 39 (2):159-187.
    The bulk of this address concerns itself with the extent to which professional scientists were involved in popular science writing in early twentieth-century Britain. Contrary to a widespread assumption, it is argued that a significant proportion of the scientific community engaged in writing the more educational type of popular science. Some high-profile figures acquired enough skill in popular writing to exert considerable influence over the public's perception of science and its significance. The address also shows how publishers actively sought ‘expert’ (...)
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  24.  52
    Varieties of Popular Science and the Transformations of Public Knowledge: Some Historical Reflections.Andreas W. Daum - 2009 - Isis 100 (2):319-332.
    ABSTRACT This essay suggests that we should understand the varieties of “popular science” as part of a larger phenomenon: the changing set of processes, practices, and actors that generate and transform public knowledge across time, space, and cultures. With such a reconceptualization we can both de‐essentialize and historicize the idea of “popularization,” free it from normative notions, and move beyond existing imbalances in scholarship. The history of public knowledge might thus find a central place in many fundamental narratives of the (...)
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  25. Methodism and popular science in the Enlightenment.Peter Lineham - 1998 - Enlightenment and Dissent 17:104-125.
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  26.  27
    Reflections on Popular Science in Britain: Genres, Categories, and Historians.Ralph O'connor - 2009 - Isis 100 (2):333-345.
  27.  13
    Some Risks in Popularizing Science and Technology.Jaap Willems - 1993 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 13 (5):260-263.
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  28. AWSAR Awarded Popular Science Stories: by Scientists for the People.R. Sharma, B. K. Tyagi, K. B. Bhushan, G. Jain & Avilekh N. (eds.) - 2020 - Vigyan Prasar.
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  29.  72
    Martial Bliss: War and Peace in Popular Science Robotics. [REVIEW]Robert M. Geraci - 2011 - Philosophy and Technology 24 (3):339-354.
    In considering how to best deploy robotic systems in public and private sectors, we must consider what individuals will expect from the robots with which they interact. Public awareness of robotics—as both military machines and domestic helpers—emerges out of a braided stream composed of science fiction and popular science. These two genres influence news media, government and corporate spending, and public expectations. In the Euro-American West, both science fiction and popular science are ambivalent about the military applications for robotics, and (...)
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  30.  15
    Communicating environmental science beyond academia: Stylistic patterns of newsworthiness in popular science journalism.Katarzyna Molek-Kozakowska - 2017 - Discourse and Communication 11 (1):69-88.
    Science communication in online media is a discursive domain where science-related content is often expressed through styles characteristic of popular journalism. This article aims to characterize some dominant stylistic patterns in magazine articles devoted to environmental issues by identifying the devices used to enhance newsworthiness, given the fact that for some readers environmental topics may no longer seem engaging. The analytic perspective is an adaptation of the newsworthiness framework that has been applied in news discourse studies. The material is a (...)
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  31.  11
    Popularizing Science and Technology in the European Periphery, 1800-2000 - edited by Faidra Papanelopoulou.Peter J. Bowler - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (3):258-259.
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  32.  31
    A literate scrutiny of a popular science: Ralph O’Connor: The earth on show: Fossils and the poetics of popular science, 1802-1856. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2007, xv+531pp, $45, £23.50 HB.Aileen Fyfe - 2011 - Metascience 21 (3):579-582.
    A literate scrutiny of a popular science Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-4 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9584-7 Authors Aileen Fyfe, School of History, University of St Andrews, St Katharine’s Lodge, The Scores, St Andrews, Fife, KY16 9AR Scotland, UK Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  33.  21
    The Effectiveness of Teacher Support for Students’ Learning of Artificial Intelligence Popular Science Activities.Sheng-Yi Wu & Kuay-Keng Yang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The burgeoning of new technologies is increasingly affecting people’s lives. One new technology that is heatedly discussed is artificial intelligence in education. To allow students to understand the impact of emerging technologies on people’s future lives from a young age, some popular science activities are being progressively introduced into elementary school curricula. Popular science activities are informal education programs and practices of universal education. However, two issues need to be discussed in the implementation of these activities. First, because these informal (...)
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  34.  21
    Peter Broks.Understanding Popular Science. Foreword by Stuart Allen. x + 183 pp., bibl., index. New York: Open University Press, 2006. £17.99. [REVIEW]Vidar Enebakk - 2007 - Isis 98 (3):662-663.
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  35.  18
    Embracing Mystery: Radiation Risks and Popular Science Writing in the Early Cold War.David K. Hecht - 2021 - Journal of the History of Biology 54 (1):127-141.
    Narrative form is crucial to the understanding of science in popular culture. This is particularly true with subjects such as radiation, in which the technical details at hand are often remote from everyday experience—as well as contested or uncertain among experts. This article examines the narrative choices made by three popular texts that publicized radiation risks to the public during the Cold War: John Hersey's Hiroshima, David Bradley's No Place to Hide, and Ralph Lapp's The Voyage of the Lucky Dragon. (...)
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  36.  8
    Sarah Tinker Perrault, Communicating Popular Science: From Deficit to Democracy. [REVIEW]Yiqiong Zhang - 2015 - Discourse Studies 17 (4):501-502.
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  37.  22
    : Killer Instinct: The Popular Science of Human Nature in Twentieth-Century America.Rachel E. Walker - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):209-211.
  38.  12
    Michael R. Lynn, Popular Science and Public Opinion in Eighteenth-Century France. Studies in Early Modern European History. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2006. Pp. ix+177. ISBN 0-7190-7373-1. £50.00. [REVIEW]Oliver Hochadel - 2008 - British Journal for the History of Science 41 (1):143-144.
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  39.  29
    Discovering Science from an Armchair: Popular Science in British Magazines of the Interwar Years.Peter J. Bowler - 2016 - Annals of Science 73 (1):89-107.
    ABSTRACTAnalysing the contents of magazines published with the stated intention of conveying information about science and technology to the public provides a mechanism for evaluation what counted as ‘popular science’. This article presents numerical surveys of the contents of three magazines published in inter-war Britain and offers an evaluation of the results. The problem of defining relevant topic-categories is addressed, both direct and indirect strategies being employed to ensure that the topics correspond to what the editors and publishers took to (...)
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  40.  25
    Introduction: Science popularization, dictatorships, and democracies.Clara Florensa & Agustí Nieto-Galan - 2022 - History of Science 60 (3):329-347.
    The study of science popularization in dictatorships, such as Franco’s regime, offers a useful window through which to review definitions of controversial categories such as “popular science” and the “public sphere.” It also adds a new analytical perspective to the historiography of dictatorships and their totalitarian nature. Moreover, studying science popularization in these regimes provides new tools for a critical analysis of key contemporary concepts such as nationalism, internationalism, democracy, and technocracy.
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  41.  19
    Popularizing Science and Technology in the European Periphery, 1800–2000 Science for All: The Popularisation of Science in Early Twentieth-Century Britain. [REVIEW]Rachel Dunn - 2011 - Annals of Science:1-4.
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  42. Reductionism as an Identity Marker in Popular Science.Hauke Riesch - 2015 - In Susann Wagenknecht, Nancy J. Nersessian & Hanne Andersen (eds.), Empirical Philosophy of Science: Introducing Qualitative Methods into Philosophy of Science. Cham: Springer International Publishing.
     
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  43.  13
    Was There Really a Popular Science “Boom”?Bruce V. Lewenstein - 1987 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 12 (2):29-41.
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  44. Bioethics in popular science: evaluating the media impact of The Immortal Llife of Henrietta Lacks on the biobank debate. [REVIEW]Matthew C. Nisbet & Declan Fahy - 2013 - BMC Medical Ethics 14 (1):1-9.
    BackgroundThe global expansion of biobanks has led to a range of bioethical concerns related to consent, privacy, control, ownership, and disclosure. As an opportunity to engage broader audiences on these concerns, bioethicists have welcomed the commercial success of Rebecca Skloot’s 2010 bestselling book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. To assess the impact of the book on discussion within the media and popular culture more generally, we systematically analyzed the ethics-related themes emphasized in reviews and articles about the book, and (...)
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  45.  25
    How Superstition Won and Science Lost: Popularizing Science and Health in the United StatesJohn C. Burnham.Marcel Lafollette - 1989 - Isis 80 (3):501-502.
  46.  41
    The Power of Weak Competitors: Women Scholars, “Popular Science,” and the Building of a Scientific Community in Italy, 1860s-1930s. [REVIEW]Paola Govoni - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):405-436.
    ArgumentThe history of Italian “popular science” publishing from the 1860s to the 1930s provides the context to explore three phenomena: the building of a scientific community, the entering of women into higher education, and (male) scientists’ reaction to women in science. The careers of Evangelina Bottero (1859–1950) and Carolina Magistrelli (1857–1939), science writers and teachers in an institute of higher education, offer hints towards an understanding of those interrelated macro phenomena. The dialogue between a case study and the general context (...)
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  47.  34
    Divining the Enlightenment: Public Opinion and Popular Science in Old Regime France.Michael Lynn - 2001 - Isis 92 (1):34-54.
  48.  15
    Afterword: Science popularization, dictatorships, and democracies.Geert Somsen - 2022 - History of Science 60 (3):430-435.
    This Afterword to the special section on Science Popularization in Francoist Spain draws general conclusions from its case studies. Most overarchingly, the different contributions show that popularization existed under this dictatorial regime, and hence does not require a Habermasian liberal-democratic public sphere. Four more specific lessons are also drawn, each shedding new light on either science popularization or dictatorial regimes. (1) Popularization has not only been a way to promote science, it has also been used to prop up dictatorial regimes (...)
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  49.  87
    The Poetry of Genetics: On the Pitfalls of Popularizing Science.Anita L. Allen - 2009 - Hypatia 24 (4):247 - 257.
    The role genetic inheritance plays in the way human beings look and behave is a question about the biology of human sexual reproduction, one that scientists connected with the Human Genome Project dashed to answer before the close of the twentieth century. This is also a question about politics, and, it turns out, poetry, because, as the example of Lucretius shows, poetry is an ancient tool for the popularization of science. "Popularization" is a good word for successful efforts to communicate (...)
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  50.  27
    Crash Course History of Science: Popular Science for General Education?Allison Marsh & Bethany Johnson - 2020 - Isis 111 (3):588-594.
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