Results for 'Man Stephens'

979 found
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  1.  14
    Unraveling Temporal Dynamics of Multidimensional Statistical Learning in Implicit and Explicit Systems: An X‐Way Hypothesis.Stephen Man-Kit Lee, Nicole Sin Hang Law & Shelley Xiuli Tong - 2024 - Cognitive Science 48 (4):e13437.
    Statistical learning enables humans to involuntarily process and utilize different kinds of patterns from the environment. However, the cognitive mechanisms underlying the simultaneous acquisition of multiple regularities from different perceptual modalities remain unclear. A novel multidimensional serial reaction time task was developed to test 40 participants’ ability to learn simple first‐order and complex second‐order relations between uni‐modal visual and cross‐modal audio‐visual stimuli. Using the difference in reaction times between sequenced and random stimuli as the index of domain‐general statistical learning, a (...)
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  2.  50
    The Role of Non-Governmental Organizations in Public Health Law.Suzi Ruhl, Man Stephens & Paul Locke - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (s4):76-77.
  3.  21
    The Mismeasure of Man.Stephen Jay Gould - 1980 - W.W. Norton and Company.
    Examines the history and inherent flaws of the tests science has used to measure intelligence.
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  4.  63
    „Wie man der hegelschen Philosophie beibringt, Englisch zu sprechen“: Stephen Houlgate, interviewt von Max Gottschlich.Max Gottschlich & Stephen Houlgate - 2018 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 66 (4):532-557.
    Stephen Houlgate is one of the leading Hegel scholars of the English-speaking world. In this interview he explains how he became a “Hegelian” while studying in Cambridge, and he offers a fundamental profile of his account of Hegel. The interview addresses the following questions: Why does Houlgate consider Hegel’s philosophy to be the “consummate critical philosophy”? What are the main barriers to a proper access to Hegel’s thought? Why is logic as dialectical logic still indispensable for philosophical thought? And finally, (...)
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  5.  13
    The Man Who Could Fly: St. Joseph of Copertino and the Mystery of Levitation, by Michael Grosso.Stephen Braude - 2016 - Journal of Scientific Exploration 30 (2).
    The case of St. Joseph, the Flying Friar, is one of the most fascinating in the entire history of parapsychology. But until now, there was very little written in English about Joseph. Grosso’s new book fills that void handily, and goes well beyond that by speculating in detail and great subtlety on a variety of surrounding issues, including the efficacy of prayer, the history of religion and religious miracles in general, and the psychology of the period in relation to the (...)
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  6. Man in search of man.Stephen J. Minkiel - 1983 - Hartford, Conn.: Vincentian Fathers, New England Province.
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  7.  24
    Man the Maker: A History of Technology and Engineering. R. J. Forbes. The Life of Science Library, Vol. 14. New York: Henry Schuman, Inc., 1950. 41 pls. 27 text illus., 355 pp. $4.00.Stephen C. Cappannari - 1952 - Philosophy of Science 19 (4):351-351.
  8. Could man be an irrational animal?Stephen P. Stich - 1985 - Synthese 64 (1):115-35.
    1. When we attribute beliefs, desires, and other states of common sense psychology to a person, or for that matter to an animal or an artifact, we are assuming or presupposing that the person or object can be treated as an intentional system. 2. An intentional system is one which is rational through and through; its beliefs are those it ought to have, given its perceptual capacities, its epistemic needs, and its biography…. Its desires are those it ought to have, (...)
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  9.  50
    Thinking tools: The straw man.Stephen Law - 2008 - Think 6 (16):75.
    Thinking Tools is a regular feature that introduces pointers on thinking clearly and rigorously.
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  10.  96
    Aristotle's Man: Speculations Upon Aristotelian Anthropology.Stephen R. L. Clark - 1975 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Words have determinable sense only within a complex of unstated assumptions, and all interpretation must therefore go beyond the given material. This book addresses what is man's place in the Aristotelian world. It also describes man's abilities and prospects in managing his life, and considers how far Aristotle's treatment of time and history licenses the sort of dynamic interpretation of his doctrines that have been given. The ontological model that explains much of Aristotle's conclusions and methods is one of life-worlds, (...)
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  11. The disintegration of a man".Stephen K. George - 2005 - In The moral philosophy of John Steinbeck. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  12. (1 other version)The Mismeasure of Man.Stephen Jay Gould - 1983 - Ethics 94 (1):153-155.
     
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  13. Aristokle's Man. Speculations upon Aristotelian Anthropology.Stephen R. L. Clark - 1981 - Critica 13 (37):102-107.
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  14.  9
    Chapter 2. The Dying Man and the Dazed Animal: Heidegger.Stephen Mulhall - 2007 - In Philosophical Myths of the Fall. Princeton University Press. pp. 46-84.
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  15. The use of `man's function' in Aristotle.Stephen Clark - 1972 - Ethics 82 (4):269-283.
  16.  27
    How Is a Man to Decide? Unjust Combatants, Duress and McMahan’s Killing in War.Stephen Deakin - 2019 - Journal of Military Ethics 18 (2):110-128.
    ABSTRACTJeff McMahan’s much-discussed work Killing in War is an important part of the revisionist school of just war studies. This paper avoids discussion of McMahan’s use of human rights and exami...
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  17.  43
    Against Nihilism: Nietzsche and Kubrick on the Future of Man.Stephen Zepke - 2007 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 17 (2):37-69.
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  18. Changing self-concept in the time of COVID-19: a close look at physician reflections on social media.Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna, Stephen Mason, Crystal Lim, Kiley Wei Jen Loh, Wei Sean Yong, Jin Wei Kwek, Yoke Lim Soong, Yun Ting Ong, Ruth Si Man Wong, Javier Rui Ming Tan, Elijah Gin Lim, Caleb Wei Hao Ng, Keith Zi Yuan Chua, Elaine Quah, Chong Yao Ho & Min Chiam - 2022 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 17 (1):1-11.
    BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has changed the healthcare landscape drastically. Stricken by sharp surges in morbidity and mortality with resource and manpower shortages confounding their efforts, the medical community has witnessed high rates of burnout and post-traumatic stress amongst themselves. Whilst the prevailing literature has offered glimpses into their professional war, no review thus far has collated the deeply personal reflections of physicians and ascertained how their self-concept, self-esteem and perceived self-worth has altered during this crisis. Without adequate intervention, this may (...)
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  19.  98
    “Curiously parallel”: Analogies of language and race in Darwin’s Descent of man. A reply to Gregory Radick.Stephen G. Alter - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 39 (3):355-358.
    In the second chapter of The descent of man , Charles Darwin interrupted his discussion of the evolutionary origins of language to describe ten ways in which the formation of languages and of biological species were ‘curiously’ similar. I argue that these comparisons served mainly as analogies in which linguistic processes stood for aspects of biological evolution. Darwin used these analogies to recapitulate themes from On the origin of species , including common descent, genealogical classification, the struggle for existence, and (...)
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  20.  10
    Climbing Man's Family Tree.Stephen F. Holtzman - 1975 - Isis 66 (3):404-406.
  21.  25
    "Old Western Man" for Our Times.Stephen Logan - 1998 - Renascence 51 (1):63-86.
  22. A Diary of the Young Man as an Artist.Stephen McLaren - 2007 - In Jan Lloyd Jones (ed.), Art and Time. Australian Scholarly Publishing. pp. 114.
     
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  23.  14
    The Thin Man is His Clothing: Dressing Masculine to be Masculine.Stephen Buetow - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (3):429-437.
    Body image research focuses almost exclusively on women or overweight and obesity or both. Yet, body image concerns among thin men are common and can result, at least in part, from mixed messages in society around how men qua men should dress and behave in order to look good and feel good. Stand-alone interventions to meet these different messages tend to provide men with little therapeutic relief. This conceptual paper draws on literature from the medical humanities; gender and body image (...)
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  24.  10
    The Natural and the Human: Science and the Shaping of Modernity, 1739–1841.Stephen Gaukroger - 2016 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Stephen Gaukroger presents an original account of the development of empirical science and the understanding of human behaviour from the mid-eighteenth century. During this period science was cut loose from the legitimating culture in which it had had a public rationale as a fruitful and worthwhile form of enquiry. An abrupt but fundamental shift in how the tasks of scientific enquiry were conceived is at the centre of this development, and at its core lies the naturalization of the human: attempts (...)
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  25.  92
    Of stones, men and angels: The competing myth of Isabelle Duncan's Pre-Adamite Man (1860).Stephen David Snobelen - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (1):59-104.
    Published within weeks of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species, Isabelle Duncan's Pre-Adamite Man is the first full-length treatment of preadamism by an evangelical. Intended as a reconciliation of Genesis and geology, Duncan's work gained immediacy when it was published shortly after the September 1859 revelations that men had walked among the mammoths. Written in the tradition of evangelical ‘Christian philosophy’, Pre-Adamite Man deploys innovative biblical hermeneutics and recent trends in geology to set out both a biblical preadamite theory, and an (...)
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  26.  97
    The Uses of Laughter in Greek Culture.Stephen Halliwell - 1991 - Classical Quarterly 41 (02):279-.
    The proposition that man is the only animal capable of laughter is at least as old as Aristotle . In a strictly physical sense, this is probably false; but it is undoubtedly true that as a psychologically expressive and socially potent means of communication, laughter is a distinctively human phenomenon. Any attempt to study sets of cultural attitudes towards laughter, or the particular types of personal conduct which these attitudes shape and influence, must certainly adopt a wider perspective than a (...)
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  27.  97
    Not So Fast: A Response to Augustine’s Critique of the BICS Contest.Stephen Braude, Imants Barušs, Arnaud Delorme, Dean Radin & Helané Wahbeh - 2022 - Journal of Scientific Exploration 36 (2):399-411.
    Keith Augustine’s critical evaluation of the essay contest sponsored by the Bigelow Institute of Consciousness Studies (BICS) is an interesting but problematic review. It mixes reasonable and detailed criticisms of the contest and many of the winning essays with a disappointing reliance on some of the most trite and superficial criticisms of parapsychological research. Ironically, Augustine criticizes the winning essays for using straw-man arguments and cherry-picked evidence even though many of his own arguments commit these same errors.
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  28.  38
    Descartes' Treatise on Man and Its Reception.Stephen Gaukroger & Delphine Antoine-Mahut (eds.) - 2016 - Springer.
    This edited volume features 20 essays written by leading scholars that provide a detailed examination of L’Homme by René Descartes. It explores the way in which this work developed themes not just on questions such as the circulation of the blood, but also on central questions of perception and our knowledge of the world. Coverage first offers a critical discussion on the different versions of L'Homme, including the Latin, French, and English translations and the 1664 editions. Next, the authors examine (...)
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  29.  22
    Ideology and Insanity -- Essays on the Psychiatric Dehumanisation of Man.Stephen Little - 1985 - Journal of Medical Ethics 11 (3):167-167.
  30.  30
    (1 other version)History of English thought in the eighteenth century.Leslie Stephen - 1902 - New York,: G. P. Putnam's sons; [etc., etc.].
    Leslie Stephen (1832–1904) was a writer, philosopher and literary critic whose work was published widely in the nineteenth century. As a young man Stephen was ordained deacon, but he later became agnostic and much of his work reflects his interest in challenging popular religion. This two-volume work, first published in 1876, is no exception: it focuses on the eighteenth-century deist controversy and its effects, as well as the reactions to what Stephen saw as a revolution in thought. Comprehensive and full (...)
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  31.  39
    Descartes' System of Natural Philosophy.Stephen Gaukroger - 2002 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    Towards the end of his life, Descartes published the first four parts of a projected six-part work, The Principles of Philosophy. This was intended to be the definitive statement of his complete system of philosophy, dealing with everything from cosmology to the nature of human happiness. In this book, Stephen Gaukroger examines the whole system, and reconstructs the last two parts, 'On Living Things' and 'On Man', from Descartes' other writings. He relates the work to the tradition of late Scholastic (...)
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  32.  6
    History of English Thought in the Eighteenth Century 2 Volume Set.Leslie Stephen - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    Leslie Stephen was a writer, philosopher and literary critic whose work was published widely in the nineteenth century. As a young man Stephen was ordained deacon, but he later became agnostic and much of his work reflects his interest in challenging popular religion. This two-volume work, first published in 1876, is no exception: it focuses on the eighteenth-century deist controversy and its effects, as well as the reactions to what Stephen saw as a revolution in thought. Comprehensive and full of (...)
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  33.  17
    (1 other version)Newton and Religion: Context, Nature, and Influence (review).Stephen D. Snobelen - 2002 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (1):125-126.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.1 (2002) 125-126 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Newton and Religion: Context, Nature, and Influence James E. Force and Richard H. Popkin, editors. Newton and Religion: Context, Nature, and Influence. International Archives of the History of Ideas. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999. Pp. xvii + 325. Cloth, $168.00. When James Force and Richard Popkin published their Essays on the Context, Nature, and (...)
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  34.  87
    Separated at Birth: The Interlinked Origins of Darwin’s Unconscious Selection Concept and the Application of Sexual Selection to Race.Stephen G. Alter - 2007 - Journal of the History of Biology 40 (2):231-258.
    This essay traces the interlinked origins of two concepts found in Charles Darwin's writings: "unconscious selection," and sexual selection as applied to humanity's anatomical race distinctions. Unconscious selection constituted a significant elaboration of Darwin's artificial selection analogy. As originally conceived in his theoretical notebooks, that analogy had focused exclusively on what Darwin later would call "methodical selection," the calculated production of desired changes in domestic breeds. By contrast, unconscious selection produced its results unintentionally and at a much slower pace. Inspiration (...)
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  35. Descartes: The World and Other Writings.Stephen Gaukroger (ed.) - 1998 - Cambridge University Press.
    Descartes' The World offers the most comprehensive vision of the nature of the world since Aristotle, and is crucial for an understanding of his later writings, in particular the Meditations and Principles of Philosophy. Above all, it provides an insight into how Descartes conceived of natural philosophy before he started to reformulate his doctrines in terms of a sceptically driven epistemology. Of its two parts, the Treatise on Light introduced the first comprehensive, quantitative version of a mechanistic natural philosophy, supplying (...)
     
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  36.  49
    Nature, Purity, Ontology.P. H. G. Stephens - 2000 - Environmental Values 9 (3):267-294.
    Standard defences of preservationism, and of the intrinsic value of nature more generally, are vulnerable to at least three objections. The first of these comes from social constructivism, the second from the claim that it is incoherent to argue that nature is both 'other' and something with which we can feel unity, whilst the third links defences of nature to authoritarian objectivism and dangerously misanthropic normative dichotomies which set pure nature against impure humanity. I argue that all these objections may (...)
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  37. Man falls down : art, life and finitude in Bergson's essay on laughter.Stephen Crocker - 2010 - In Michael R. Kelly (ed.), Bergson and phenomenology. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  38.  14
    Speculating Daguerre: Art and Enterprise in the Work of L. J. M. Daguerre.Stephen C. Pinson - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre was a true nineteenth-century visionary—a painter, printmaker, set designer, entrepreneur, inventor, and pioneer of photography. Though he was widely celebrated beyond his own lifetime for his invention of the daguerreotype, it was his origins as a theatrical designer and purveyor of visual entertainment that paved the way for Daguerre's emergence as one of the world's most iconic imagemakers. In Speculating Daguerre, Stephen C. Pinson reinterprets the story of the man and his time, painting a vivid picture (...)
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  39.  30
    Shakespeare and the Kinds of Drama.Stephen Orgel - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 6 (1):107-123.
    If we think about comedy in terms of stock characters, Shakespeare provides some startling examples. Here, for instance, are two hypothetical casts: A jealous husband, a chaste wife, an irascible father, a clever malicious servant, a gullible friend, a bawdy witty maid; A pair of lovers, their irascible fathers, a bawdy serving woman, a witty friend, a malicious friend, a kindly foolish priest. Both of these groups represent recognizable comic configurations, though in fact they are also the casts of Othello (...)
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  40. Self-Interest and Self-Concern.Stephen Darwall - 1997 - Social Philosophy and Policy 14 (1):158.
    In what follows I consider whether the idea of a person's interest or good might be better understood through that of care or concern for that person for her sake, rather than conversely, as is ordinarily assumed. Contrary to desire-satisfaction theories of interest, such an account can explain why not everything a person rationally desires is part of her good, since what a person sensibly wants is not necessarily what we would sensibly want, insofar as we care about her. First, (...)
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  41.  31
    The Philosophical Significance of Stephen Neale’s Facing Facts.Richard N. Manning - 2006 - ProtoSociology 23:31-49.
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  42.  42
    Aristotle's Man.Martha Nussbaum & Stephen R. L. Clark - 1977 - Philosophical Review 86 (2):241.
  43.  73
    Civility and sociability: Hobbes on man and citizen.Stephen H. Daniel - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (2):209-215.
  44. Normativity and Projection in Hobbes’s Leviathan.Stephen Darwall - 2000 - Philosophical Review 109 (3):313-347.
    A perennial problem in interpreting Hobbes’s moral and political thought in Leviathan has been to square the apparently irreducible normativity of central Hobbesian concepts and premises with his materialism and empiricism. Thus, Hobbes defines a “law of nature” as a “precept or general rule, found out by reason, by which a man is forbidden to do that which is destructive of his life” and the “right of nature” as “the liberty each man hath to use his own power, as he (...)
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  45.  26
    The Mismeasure of Man. Stephen Jay Gould.Allan Janik - 1983 - Ethics 94 (1):153-155.
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  46.  42
    Epistemology of perception: Ganṅgeśa's Tattvacintāmaṇi: jewel of reflection on the truth (about epistemology), the Perception chapter (Pratyakṣa-khaṇḍa).Stephen H. Phillips - 2004 - New York: American Institute of Buddhist Studies. Edited by Ramanuja Tatacharya, S. N. & Gaṅgeśa.
    The present work is a translation of The Perception Chapter of Jewel of Reflection on the Truth, a foundational text by the great fourteenth-century Indian logician Gangesa Upadhyaya. The authors' introduction and running commentary to the translation provide essential theoretical and historical background, contextualization, analysis, and comparison of Nyaya and Western traditions. Includes a detailed glossary and index. Published by American Institute of Buddhist Studies (AIBS).
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  47.  18
    Climbing Man's Family Tree. A Collection of Major Writings on Human Phylogeny, 1699 to 1971Theodore D. McCown Kenneth A. R. Kennedy. [REVIEW]Stephen Holtzman - 1974 - Isis 65 (1):107-108.
  48.  6
    Person and Polis: Max Scheler's Personalism as Political Theory.Stephen F. Schneck - 1987 - SUNY Press.
    Martin Heidegger cited him as “the most potent philosophical power... in all of contemporary philosophy.” Ortega y Gasset called him “the first man of genius, the Adam of the new Paradise.” Writing at a crucial time in intellectual history, his influence has extended to persons as diverse as Dietrich von Hildebrand, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Karol Wojtyla, Jurgen Habermas, Ernst Bloch, and members of the generation of thinkers that developed in the German universities during the Weimar years. Despite this far-reaching impact, the (...)
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  49.  15
    The Ontological Obsessions of Radical Thought.Stephen Gardner - 2003 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 10 (1):1-22.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THE ONTOLOGICAL OBSESSIONS OF RADICAL THOUGHT1 Stephen Gardner University ofTulsa Rather than make an inventory ofthis hodgepodge ofdead ideas, we should take as our starting point the passions that fueled it. François Furet (4) Any synthesis is incomplete which ends in an object or an abstract concept and not a living relationship between two individuals. René Girard (Deceit 178) Karl Marx offers two observations which I take as the (...)
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  50.  37
    Peter Harrison, The Fall of Man and the Foundations of Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Pp. xi+300. ISBN 978-0-521-87559-2. £50.00. [REVIEW]Stephen Gaukroger - 2009 - British Journal for the History of Science 42 (2):294.
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