Results for ' imperial medicine'

998 found
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  1.  20
    Imperial Medicine and Indigenous SocietiesDavid ArnoldDisease, Medicine, and Empire: Perspectives on Western Medicine and the Experience of European ExpansionRoy MacLeod Milton Lewis.Guenter B. Risse - 1990 - Isis 81 (4):748-749.
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  2.  18
    Douglas M. Haynes. Imperial Medicine: Patrick Manson and the Conquest of Tropical Disease. 229 pp., illus., tables, index. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001. $37.50, £26.50. [REVIEW]Shang‐Jen Li - 2002 - Isis 93 (3):510-511.
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  3.  18
    DOUGLAS M. HAYNES, Imperial Medicine: Patrick Manson and the Conquest of Tropical Disease. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001. Pp. 229. ISBN 0-8122-3598-3. £26.50, $37.50. [REVIEW]Mark Harrison - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (3):347-379.
  4.  6
    : Imperial Bodies in London: Empire, Mobility, and the Making of British Medicine, 1880–1914.Philippa Levine - 2023 - Isis 114 (1):205-206.
  5.  26
    Forensic Medicine in Pre-Imperial China.Derk Bodde - 1982 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 102 (1):1-15.
  6.  2
    Medicine, Law, and the State in Imperial Russia. [REVIEW]Mary Conroy - 2012 - Isis 103:791-792.
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  7.  5
    ‘A Great Beneficial Disease’: Colonial Medicine and Imperial Authority in J.G. Farrell’s The Siege of Krishnapur.Sam Goodman - 2015 - Journal of Medical Humanities 36 (2):141-156.
    This article examines J. G. Farrell’s depictions of colonial medicine as a means of analysing the historical reception of the further past and argues that the end-of-Empire context of the 1970s in which Farrell was writing informed his reappraisal of Imperial authority with particular regard to the limits of medical knowledge and treatment. The article illustrates how in The Siege of Krishnapur (1973), Farrell repeatedly sought to challenge the authority of medical and colonial history by making direct use (...)
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  8.  8
    The History of Imperial College London, 1907–2007: Higher Education and Research in Science, Technology, and Medicine[REVIEW]Robert Fox - 2008 - Isis 99:440-441.
  9.  25
    Galina Kichigina, The Imperial Laboratory: Experimental Physiology and Clinical Medicine in Post-Crimean Russia. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi. Pp. ii+374. ISBN 978-90-420-2658-2. £72.20. [REVIEW]Elizabeth Neswald - 2010 - British Journal for the History of Science 43 (3):491-493.
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  10.  20
    Elisa M. Becker. Medicine, Law, and the State in Imperial Russia. x + 399 pp., illus., index. Budapest/New York: Central European University Press, 2011. €45. [REVIEW]Mary Schaeffer Conroy - 2012 - Isis 103 (4):791-792.
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  11.  20
    Yi-Li Wu. Reproducing Women: Medicine, Metaphor, and Childbirth in Late Imperial China. xiii + 362 pp., illus., app., bibl., index. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2010. [REVIEW]Reiko Shinno - 2012 - Isis 103 (3):569-570.
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  12.  28
    Avi Sharma. We Lived for the Body: Natural Medicine and Public Health in Imperial Germany. ix + 210 pp., bibl., index. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press, 2014. $35. [REVIEW]Florian G. Mildenberger - 2015 - Isis 106 (4):957-958.
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  13.  5
    Perceptive insight into the past: The rise of the laboratory in nineteenth-century Russian medicine: Galina Kichigina: The imperial laboratory: Experimental physiology and clinical medicine in post-Crimean Russia. Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi, 2009, 374 pp, €76, $103 HB. [REVIEW]Alexander Trapeznik - 2011 - Metascience 20 (1):135-137.
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  14.  19
    Hannah Gay, The History of Imperial College London, 1907–2007: Higher Education and Research in Science, Technology and Medicine. London: Imperial College Press, 2007. pp. xxvii+825. ISBN 1-86094-709-3. £122.40, $152.00. [REVIEW]Jean-françois Auger - 2009 - British Journal for the History of Science 42 (4):630.
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  15.  14
    Hannah Gay. The History of Imperial College London, 1907–2007: Higher Education and Research in Science, Technology, and Medicine. Foreword by, Richard Sykes. xxvii + 825 pp., illus., figs., tables, apps., index. London: Imperial College Press, 2007. $48. [REVIEW]Robert Fox - 2008 - Isis 99 (2):440-441.
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  16.  16
    The origins of roman medicine in Pliny The Elder’s Natural History.Ana Thereza Basílio Vieira - 2009 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 3:31-39.
    The medical literature in Rome firstly lives on Greek scientific works, because Latin language, inappropriate for speculative matters, couldn’t be succeeded to express the grandiosity and precision of the subject. So, Roman medicine assimilates the Greek medical culture. Roman doctors dedicate themselves to a public hygiene, prudently systematizing practice and concrete knowledge of other cultures. Pliny, the elder writes a work untitled Natural History, composed in thirty seven books, and interests us most those dedicated to medicine, its history (...)
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  17.  23
    Graphic Medicine: Comics Turn a Critical Eye on Health Care.Sarah Glazer - 2015 - Hastings Center Report 45 (3):15-19.
    A patient arrives in the emergency room apparently in a comatose state. But is he really unconscious or just faking? The young doctors on duty are skeptical. Failing to get a reaction with a chest rub, they try a variety of methods that become increasingly sadistic—pressing on the patient's fingernail with a ballpoint pen, spraying his testicles with a skin‐freezing compound, announcing an imminent eye injection to scare the patient awake.I first encountered those chilling pen‐and‐ink images in a 2012 comic (...)
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  18.  22
    Commercializing Medicine or Benefiting the People – The First Public Pharmacy in China.Asaf Goldschmidt - 2008 - Science in Context 21 (3):311-350.
    ArgumentIn this article I describe the establishment and early development of an institution that is unique to the history of Chinese medicine – the Imperial Pharmacy. Established in 1076 during the great reforms of the Song dynasty, the Imperial Pharmacy was a remarkable institution that played different political, social, economic, and medical roles over the years of its existence. Initially it was an economic institution designed to curb the power of plutocrats who were manipulating medicinal drug markets (...)
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  19.  55
    The Golden Mirror in the Imperial Court of the Qianlong Emperor, 1739-1742.Marta Hanson - 2003 - Early Science and Medicine 8 (2):111-147.
    In the last month of 1739, the third of the Manchu rulers, the Qianlong emperor , ordered the compilation of a treatise on medicine "to rectify medical knowledge" throughout the empire. By the end of 1742, eighty participants chosen from several offices within the palace bureaucracy based in Beijing completed the Golden Mirror of the Orthodox Lineage of Medicine, the only imperially commissioned medical text the Qing government's Imperial Printing Office published. The Golden Mirror represents both the (...)
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  20.  24
    Mutual Transformation of Colonial and Imperial Botanizing? The Intimate yet Remote Collaboration in Colonial Korea.Jung Lee - 2016 - Science in Context 29 (2):179-211.
    ArgumentMutuality in “contact zones” has been emphasized in cross-cultural knowledge interaction in re-evaluating power dynamics between centers and peripheries and in showing the hybridity of modern science. This paper proposes an analytical pause on this attempt to better invalidate centers by paying serious attention to the limits of mutuality in transcultural knowledge interaction imposed by asymmetries of power. An unusually reciprocal interaction between a Japanese forester, Ishidoya Tsutomu, at the colonial forestry department, and his Korean subordinate Chung Tyaihyon is chosen (...)
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  21.  10
    Reflections on Visual and Material Sources for the History of the Exact Sciences in Early Imperial China.Daniel Patrick Morgan - 2020 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 28 (3):325-357.
    This article takes stock of the seeming wealth of visual and material sources concerning stars and numbers that has come down to us from early imperial China (221 BCE–755 CE) and their minimal impact on how we write the history of astronomy and mathematics in this period. My goal is to offer ideas about how we might better engage with these sources and work across ancient and modern disciplines. I begin by outlining the conceptual categories into which our historical (...)
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  22.  9
    A Human Right to What Kind of Medicine?Kathryn Muyskens - 2023 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 48 (6):577-590.
    The human right to health, insofar as it is widely recognized, is typically thought to include the right to fair access to adequate healthcare, but the operating conception of healthcare in this context has been under-defined. This lack of conceptual clarity has often led in practice to largely Western cultural assumptions about what validly constitutes “healthcare” and “medicine.” Ethnocentric and parochial assumptions ought to be avoided, lest they give justification to the accusation that universal human rights are mere tools (...)
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  23. Mental Health and Academic Motivation Among Graduating College Students: A Correlational Study.Reignell Mariz Imperial, Jonan Jeff Ibanga, Josaiah David, Joana Mae Macapagal & Jhoselle Tus - 2023 - Psychology and Education: A Multidisciplinary Journal 10 (8):902-908.
    This study investigates the significant relationship between mental health and academic motivation among graduating students. Thus, the study employed a correlational design to determine if there is a significant relationship between mental health and academic motivation among 150 graduating college students. Hence, the Mental Health Inventory 38 (MHI-38) and Academic Motivation Scale (AMS-C28) were employed to measure the study variables. Moreover, statistical analysis reveals that the r coefficient of 0.35 indicates a low positive correlation between the variables. The p-value of (...)
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  24. Mental Health and Academic Motivation Among Graduating College Students: A Correlational Study.Reignell Mariz A. Imperial, Jonan Jeff S. Ibanga, Josaiah M. David, Joana Mae G. Macapagal & Jhoselle Tus - 2023 - Psychology and Education: A Multidisciplinary Journal 10 (1):902-908.
    This study investigates the significant relationship between mental health and academic motivation among graduating students. Thus, the study employed a correlational design to determine if there is a significant relationship between mental health and academic motivation among 150 graduating college students. Hence, the Mental Health Inventory 38 (MHI-38) and Academic Motivation Scale (AMS-C28) were employed to measure the study variables. Moreover, statistical analysis reveals that the r coefficient of 0.35 indicates a low positive correlation between the variables. The p-value of (...)
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  25. Luca Baccelli, Praxis E Poiesis Nella Filosofia Politica Moderna (Milano: Franc0 Angeli.Imperial Germany - 1991 - Filosofia 265:235-00.
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  26.  11
    L'abate di Saint-Pierre: l'idea d'Europa per un nuovo sistema di governo.Marina Imperi - 2015 - Ariccia (RM): Aracne editrice int.le S.r.l..
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  27.  6
    Hospitality and the ethico-political.Miranda Imperial - 2020 - Approaching Religion 10 (2).
    What is hospitality? Who is it addressed to? Hospitality aims at welcoming those who arrive; it demands giving space and time and sharing our own resources with others. In view of the current global migration crisis and in the midst of the social debates and a critique of the failure of affluent countries and Western democracies to respond in solidarity to those in need, this article attempts to re-consider the space for hospitality drawing from the ethical and the political as (...)
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  28.  3
    The Definitive Installation of Rhythm in Life Science and Medicine – part 2.Pascal Michon - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    Previous chapter Refinement and Canonization of the Herophilean Pulse Rhythm Theory – Galen The Greek Κλαύδιος Γαληνός – Klaúdios Galênós, Anglicized as Galen, was born in Pergamon in the first half of the 2nd century AD. He died in the first decades of the following century. He studied and traveled widely in the Roman Empire before settling in Rome, where he served prominent members of the Roman society and was finally given a position in the imperial court as personal (...)
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  29. Petition to Include Cephalopods as “Animals” Deserving of Humane Treatment under the Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.New England Anti-Vivisection Society, American Anti-Vivisection Society, The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, The Humane Society of the United States, Humane Society Legislative Fund, Jennifer Jacquet, Becca Franks, Judit Pungor, Jennifer Mather, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Lori Marino, Greg Barord, Carl Safina, Heather Browning & Walter Veit - forthcoming - Harvard Law School Animal Law and Policy Clinic:1–30.
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  30.  8
    Lectures and Other Papers.Andrew Cunningham, Francis Glisson & Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine - 1998
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  31.  5
    Person and Persona: Studies in Shakespeare.Gwyn A. Williams, Gwyn Williams & Professor of Medicine Gwyn Williams - 1981
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  32.  9
    Genetics and the Law.Aubrey Milunsky, George J. Annas, National Genetics Foundation & American Society of Law and Medicine - 2012 - Springer.
    Society has historically not taken a benign view of genetic disease. The laws permitting sterilization of the mentally re tarded~ and those proscribing consanguineous marriages are but two examples. Indeed as far back as the 5th-10th centuries, B.C.E., consanguineous unions were outlawed (Leviticus XVIII, 6). Case law has traditionally tended toward the conservative. It is reactive rather than directive, exerting its influence only after an individual or group has sustained injury and brought suit. In contrast, state legislatures have not been (...)
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  33.  5
    New Fragments of Rufus of Ephesus’ On the Retention of Menses.Brent Arehart & Joshua Bocher - 2022 - Classical Quarterly 72 (2):764-777.
    Rufus of Ephesus (fl. c.100c.e.) was a prolific medical author and practitioner in the Imperial period whose historical importance has been obscured by the loss of most of his works. One of the largest gaps in our knowledge of Rufus’ corpus is his gynaecological writings, none of which survives in full. This article assembles and comments on several fragments from Rufus’ lost gynaecological workOn the Retention of Menses(perhapsΠερὶ τῶν ἐπεχομένων ἐμμήνων). Comparison of overlapping passages from the authors Ibn al-Jazzār (...)
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  34.  9
    Gomastahs, Peons, Police and Chowdranies: The Role of Indian Subordinate in the Functioning of the Lock Hospitals and the Indian Contagious Diseases Act, 1805 to 1889.Divya Rama Gopalakrishnan - 2022 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 30 (1):29-61.
    Recent scholarship on the social history of health and medicine in colonial India has moved beyond enclavist or hegemonic aspects of imperial medicine and has rather focused on the role of Indian intermediaries and the fractured nature of colonial hegemony. Drawing inspiration from this scholarship, the article highlights the significance of the Indian subordinates in the lock hospital system in the nineteenth century Madras Presidency. This study focuses on a class of Indian subordinates called the “gomastah”, who (...)
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  35.  18
    Gomastahs, Peons, Police and Chowdranies: The Role of Indian Subordinate in the Functioning of the Lock Hospitals and the Indian Contagious Diseases Act, 1805 to 1889Gomastahs, Peons, Polizei und Chowdranies: Die Rolle der indischen Untergebenen in den Krankenhäusern für Geschlechtskrankheiten und des Contagious Diseases Act, 1805–1889. [REVIEW]Divya Rama Gopalakrishnan - 2022 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 30 (1):29-61.
    Recent scholarship on the social history of health and medicine in colonial India has moved beyond enclavist or hegemonic aspects of imperial medicine and has rather focused on the role of Indian intermediaries and the fractured nature of colonial hegemony. Drawing inspiration from this scholarship, the article highlights the significance of the Indian subordinates in the lock hospital system in the nineteenth century Madras Presidency. This study focuses on a class of Indian subordinates called the “gomastah”, who (...)
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  36. Principles of health care ethics.Richard E. Ashcroft (ed.) - 2007 - Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
    Edited by four leading members of the new generation of medical and healthcare ethicists working in the UK, respected worldwide for their work in medical ethics, Principles of Health Care Ethics, Second Edition_is a standard resource for students, professionals, and academics wishing to understand current and future issues in healthcare ethics. With a distinguished international panel of contributors working at the leading edge of academia, this volume presents a comprehensive guide to the field, with state of the art introductions to (...)
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  37.  20
    Imperfect Conceptions: Medical Knowledge, Birth Defects, and Eugenics in China.Frank Dikötter - 1998 - Columbia University Press.
    In 1995 the People's Republic of China passed a controversial Eugenics Law, which, after a torrent of international criticism, was euphemistically renamed the Maternal and Infant Health Law. Aimed at "the implementation of premarital medical checkups" to ensure that neither partner has any hereditary, venereal, reproductive, or mental disorders, the ordinance implies that those deemed "unsuitable for reproduction" should undergo sterilization or abortion or remain celibate in order to prevent "inferior births." Using this recent statute as a springboard, Frank Dikötter (...)
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  38.  13
    “Some Typically African Risks”: Safeguarding the Health of Italian Settlers During the Fascist Empire (1935–1941).Costanza Bonelli - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (1):121-152.
    This essay examines the sanitary policies for the protection of overseas communities that Italian fascism employed during the empire. From 1935–1936, the vast scale of the Ethiopian campaign, as well as intensive colonisation programmes, gave new political visibility to the issue of safeguarding Italian settlers from the risks of the tropical climate. In this period, the problem of how Italians could adapt to overseas environments moved beyond the boundaries of scientific discussion to become a major concern of colonial rule. Analysing (...)
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  39.  12
    Should infectious disease modelling research be subject to ethics review?Ben Green - 2023 - Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine 18 (1):1-7.
    Should research projects involving epidemiological modelling be subject to ethical scrutiny and peer review prior to publication? Mathematical modelling had considerable impacts during the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to social distancing and lockdowns. Imperial College conducted research leading to the website publication of a paper, Report 9, on non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) and COVID-19 mortality demand dated 16th March 2020, arguing for a Government policy of non-pharmaceutical interventions (e.g. lockdowns, social distancing, mask wearing, working from home, furlough, school closures, reduced family (...)
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  40.  17
    Locating Therapeutic Vaccines in Nineteenth-Century History.Christoph Gradmann - 2008 - Science in Context 21 (2):145-160.
    ArgumentThis essay places some therapeutic vaccines, including particularly the diphtheria antitoxin, into their larger historical context of the late nineteenth century. As industrially produced drugs, these vaccines ought to be seen in connection with the structural changes in medicine and pharmacology at the time. Given the spread of industrial culture and technology into the field of medicine and pharmacology, therapeutic vaccines can be understood as boundary objects that required and facilitated communication between industrialists, medical researchers, public health officials, (...)
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  41. 16 The logic of lockdowns: a game of modeling and evidence.Wesley J. Park - 2022 - BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine 27 (Suppl 1):A59.
    Lockdowns, or modern quarantines, involve the use of novel restrictive non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) to suppress the transmission of COVID-19. In this paper, I aim to critically analyze the emerging history and philosophy of lockdowns, with an emphasis on the communication of health evidence and risk for informing policy decisions. I draw a distinction between evidence-based and modeling-based decision-making. I argue that using the normative framework of evidence-based medicine would have recommended against the use of lockdowns. I first review the (...)
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  42.  12
    Riga Native Johann Christian Weltzien (1767–1829), Author of a Book on “Мedical Рolice”.Kostiantyn K. Vasyliev, Yurii K. Vasyliev & Olena H. Vasylieva - 2023 - Acta Baltica Historiae Et Philosophiae Scientiarum 11 (2):32-54.
    On the basis of the archival materials, first identified by the authors, and the published historical sources that have not yet come to the attention of historians of science, this article reconstructs the biography of Johann Christian Weltzien (1767–1829), doctor of medicine and surgery. In 1785, Weltzien became a court physician. In 1799, in the retinue of Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, he participated in Italian and Swiss military campaigns. After that, Weltzien was assigned to the Сourt of Grand Duke (...)
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  43.  8
    The European Perspective on Pandemics.Leander Diener & Flurin Condrau - 2023 - Isis 114 (S1):464-497.
    This review essay explores the potential of a European perspective on the history of epidemics and pandemics over the last three centuries. To this end, it follows Benoît Majerus’ proposal to distinguish four different “European” perspectives on the history of medicine. Europe is simultaneously an imaginary, geographical, imperial, and integrative space. As an imaginary space (1), “European” ideas about pandemics reveal a specific conception of public health and the state; as a geographical space (2), many historical case studies (...)
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  44.  48
    Tradizioni morali. Greci, ebrei, cristiani, islamici.Sergio Cremaschi - 2015 - Roma, Italy: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.
    Ex interiore ipso exeas. Preface. This book reconstructs the history of a still open dialectics between several ethoi, that is, shared codes of unwritten rules, moral traditions, or self-aware attempts at reforming such codes, and ethical theories discussing the nature and justification of such codes and doctrines. Its main claim is that this history neither amounts to a triumphal march of reason dispelling the mist of myth and bigotry nor to some other one-way process heading to some pre-established goal, but (...)
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  45.  15
    Beyond science and empire: circulation of knowledge in an age of global empires, 1750-1945.Matheus Alves Duarte Da Silva, Thomás A. S. Haddad & Kapil Raj (eds.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Through ten case studies by international specialists, this book investigates the circulation and production of scientific knowledge between 1750 and 1945 in the fields of agriculture, astronomy, botany, cartography, medicine, statistics, and zoology. The book will interest scholars and undergraduate and graduate students concerned with the connections between the history of science, imperial history, and global history.
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  46.  41
    Galen and the world of knowledge.Christopher Gill, Tim Whitmarsh & John Wilkins (eds.) - 2009 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This volume of new essays is based on a conference with the same title held at the University of Exeter in 2005. All those speaking on that occasion have written chapters in this volume, along with Riccardo Chiaradonna whose chapter has been specially prepared for the volume. The aim of this volume, like the conference on which it is based, is to contribute to the upsurge of new research on Galen by focusing on a topic that bridges the interests of (...)
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  47.  35
    The Role of Microbes in Agriculture: Sergei Vinogradskii’s Discovery and Investigation of Chemosynthesis, 1880–1910. [REVIEW]Lloyd T. Ackert - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (2):373-406.
    In 1890, Sergei Nikolaevich Vinogradskii (Winogradsky) proposed a novel life process called chemosynthesis. His discovery that some microbes could live solely on inorganic matter emerged during his physiological research in 1880s in Strassburg and Zurich on sulfur, iron, and nitrogen bacteria. In his nitrification research, Vinogradskii first embraced the idea that microbiology could have great bearing on agricultural problems. His critique of agricultural chemists and Kochian-style bacteriologists brought this message to the broader agricultural community, resulting in an heightened interest in (...)
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  48.  4
    An (Un)Natural History: Tracing the Magical Rhinoceros Horn in Egypt.Taylor M. Moore - 2023 - Isis 114 (3):469-489.
    Can emancipatory, decolonial histories of science be extracted from objects collected from—or made visible to history by—the archives of colonialism? To answer this question, this essay presents the case study of a rhinoceros horn amulet (qarn al-khartit), an ethnographic object collected by the British anthropologist Winifred Blackman during her fieldwork in Egypt in the late 1920s. Markedly decentering the traditional colonial history of how the rhinoceros horn was collected and displayed as an object in European museums, the essay follows the (...)
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  49.  11
    Aetiologies of Blame: Fevers, Environment, and Accountability in a War Context (France and Italy, ca. 1800).Paul-Arthur Tortosa & Guillaume Linte - 2023 - Centaurus 65 (1):63-90.
    During the Italian campaigns of the French Revolutionary Wars (1796–1801), several epidemic outbreaks sparked acrimonious aetiological debates: were the fevers spread by soldiers and prisoners of war, or produced by environmental factors? This debate was not only a scientific issue, but also a political one, for causation was linked to accountability. Looking at a series of medical investigations written by French military practitioners, this paper argues that theories of contagion were used by civilians to accuse the army of spreading disease, (...)
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  50.  4
    The Pope and the Yellow Emperor: The Interconnected Body.Andrew Koh - 2020 - Philosophy East and West 70 (2):424-446.
    The Society of Jesus has had a long relationship with China, beginning with the failed attempt by Francis Xavier to enter the country through to the achievements of Matteo Ricci, his companions, and successors. The missionaries introduced European science, including medicine, with which they engaged both the imperial court and the commoners. The eventual expulsion of the Jesuits and formal reconnection with China via the current papacy gives a poignancy to the consideration of medicine and environmental concerns. (...)
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