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Science, Education and Napoleon I

Isis 47 (4):369-382 (1956)

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  1. Dr. Thomas Beddoes : Science and medicine in politics and society.Trevor H. Levere - 1984 - British Journal for the History of Science 17 (2):187-204.
    The career of Thomas Beddoes was moulded by British responses to the French Revolution. Beddoes, until appalled by the events of the Terror, saw France as the model for mankind. The government of England took the very different view that democracy was closely allied with jacobinism and sedition. The Home Office was the agency most immediately engaged in opposing sedition, and any criticism of the King, or of the constitution in church and state, was scrutinized as being potentially seditious. In (...)
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  • Career-Making in Post-Revolutionary France: the Case of Jean-Baptiste Biot.Eugene Frankel - 1978 - British Journal for the History of Science 11 (1):36-48.
    Science is an occupation as well as an intellectual endeavour. This fact is extremely well known, but its consequences have been little explored by historians of science. Sociologists such as Merton, Hagstrom, and Storer have argued that occupational rewards motivate a scientist to publish and thereby further the intellectual ends of the scientific community. Yet, as I have shown in a recent paper, such rewards can also lead to work which is hasty, superficial, and blindly uncritical of the dominant paradigm. (...)
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