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  1. Performance practice: music, medicine and natural philosophy in Interregnum Oxford.Penelope Gouk - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Science 29 (3):257-288.
    A generation or so ago, scholarly discussion about the creation of new scientific knowledge in seventeenth-century England was often framed in terms of the respective contributions of scholars and practitioners, the effects of their training and background, the relative importance of the universities compared with London, and of the role of external and internal factors, and so forth. These discourses have now largely been put aside in favour of those emphasizing spatial metaphors and models, which are recognized as powerful conceptual (...)
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  • Newton on the Number of Colours in the Spectrum.David Topper - 1990 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 21 (2):269.
  • The Analogy between Light and Sound in the History of Optics from the ancient Greeks to Isaac Newton. Part 2†.Olivier Darrigol - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (3):206-257.
    Analogies between hearing and seeing already existed in ancient Greek theories of perception. The present paper follows the evolution of such analogies until the rise of 17th century optics, with due regard to the diversity of their origins and nature but with particular emphasis on their bearing on the physical concepts of light and sound. Whereas the old Greek analogies were only side effects of the unifying concepts of perception, the analogies of the 17th century played an important role in (...)
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