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  1. Pattern Without Process: Eugen Smirnov and the Earliest Project of Numerical Taxonomy (1923–1938).Maxim V. Vinarski - 2022 - Journal of the History of Biology 55 (3):559-583.
    The progress towards mathematization or, in a broader context, towards an increased “objectivity” is one of the main trends in the development of biological systematics in the past century. It is commonplace to start the history of numerical taxonomy with the works of R. R. Sokal and P. H. A. Sneath that in the 1960s laid the foundations of this school of taxonomy. In this article, I discuss the earliest research program in this field, developed in the 1920s by the (...)
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  • Die aktualität lyssenkos.Johann-Peter Regelmann - 1981 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 12 (2):353-363.
    Summary The complex of ‚lysenkoism‘ cannot satisfyingly be explained as a pure and internal marxist tradition and reception. A necessary external addition has to consider the social history of the Soviet Union, her political economy, and the development of her scientific history. Hence, a more adequate connection to the ‚stalinist‘ epoch can be drawn.
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  • Die Aktualität Lyssenkos.Johann-Peter Regelmann - 1981 - Zeitschrift Für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 12 (2):353-363.
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  • Nikolai Vavilov in the years of Stalin's ‘Revolution from Above’.Eduard I. Kolchinsky - 2014 - Centaurus 56 (4):330-358.
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  • The Case of Paul Kammerer: Evolution and Experimentation in the Early 20th Century. [REVIEW]Sander Gliboff - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (3):525 - 563.
    To some, a misguided Lamarckian and a fraud, to others a martyr in the fight against Darwinism, the Viennese zoologist Paul Kammerer (1880-1926) remains one of the most controversial scientists of the early 20th century. Here his work is reconsidered in light of turn-of-the-century problems in evolutionary theory and experimental methodology, as seen from Kammerer's perspective in Vienna. Kammerer emerges not as an opponent of Darwinism, but as one would-be modernizer of the 19th-century theory, which had included a role for (...)
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