- A natural history of the satyr: a dialectical history of myth and scientific observation since 1550*
- ‘Made in the Galleries of His Most Serene Highness, Florence’. Conflicts in instrument invention at the Medici court: the pendulum clock, and the Accademia del Cimento
- Francisco de Melo’s theory of vision
- The social agency of instruments of surveying and exploration c.1830–1930
- Gustave-Adolphe Hirn, the mechanical equivalent of heat, and the conservation of energy
- Vector: a surprising story of space, time, and mathematical transformation
- Developing to scale: technology and the making of global health
- Obstetrics during the French Revolution: political and medical controversies around the new obstetrical surgery
- Of comets and cosmology in Antonino Saliba’s Nuova Figura di tutte le cose of 1582
- Media and the mind: art, science, and notebooks as paper machines, 1700–1830
- A ‘heavy hammer to crack a small nut’? The creation of the European Molecular Biology Conference (EMBC), 1963–1970
- A ‘heavy hammer to crack a small nut’? The creation of the European Molecular Biology Conference (EMBC), 1963–1970
- The first six propositions of Archimedes’ on equilibrium of planes 1
- Analysing Hermann Graßmann’s works – retrospecting and re-assessing
- First entities in the De renovatione et restauratione of Paracelsus: wonder drugs for metals and for people
- Paracelsus and the Tyrolean Plague Epidemic of 1534: context and analysis of Von der Pestilentz an die Statt Stertzingen
- A Chymist Among Beasts: Reading Paracelsus Literally (with a translation of De lunaticis, chapter two)
- The book of Matthew ‘On naval timber and arboriculture’. Its structure and development
- The Mechanical Tradition of Hero of Alexandria: Strategies of Reading from Antiquity to the Early Modern Period
- A lab for all seasons: the laboratory revolution in modern botany and the rise of physiological plant ecology
- The two lights of Paracelsus: natural philosophy meets theology
- Heretical microcosmogony in Paracelsus’s Astronomia Magna (1537/8) and the anonymous Astrologia Theologizata (1617): Paracelsian anthropology in the light of Lutheran biblical hermeneutics
- ‘Prudence, Foresight, Courage, Oeconomy’: glass beehives and English society, 1650–1680
- The chymistry of rainbows, winds, lightning, heat and cold in Paracelsus
- Josiah Willard Gibbs and Pierre Maurice Duhem: two diverging personalities, and scientific styles
- Framing global mathematics: the International Mathematical Union between theorems and politics
- Julius Haast and the discovery of the origin of alpine lakes
- The late origins of the timeline, or: three paradoxes explained
- Promises of precision: questioning precision in ‘precision’ instruments
- A light on Ibn al-Haytham’s optics, Books IV and V
- Time troubles: clocks and practices of precision in early eighteenth-century observatories
- Sailing the ocean of nature: Francesca Fontana Aldrovandi in early modern Bologna
- Star Noise: Discovering the Radio Universe
- Heroic resuscitation? An attempt to revive Descartes’ method
- Lynceorum historia: le ‘schede lincee’ di Martin Fogel
- Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier’s ‘Sur la nature de l’eau’: an annotated English translation
- Quantification and precision: a brief look at some ancient accounts
- Sound between water and light: images and analogies in early acoustics, 1660–1710
- Managing precision: how to use chronometers accurately at sea
- ‘Si te omnimoda delectat precisio’: early astronomical instruments with scales and the multiple meanings of precision in the sixteenth century
- The social life of precision instruments: artisans’ trials in early-modern England, 1550–1700
- How to ensure a chronometer’s accuracy. Josiah Emery timekeepers and their users
- Stahl in France: an unknown Latin translation of the Zufällige Gedancken und nützliche Bedencken über den Streit, von dem so genannten Sulfure (1718) owned by Étienne-François Geoffroy, Jean Hellot and Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier
- Oxford mathematics at a low ebb? An 1855 dispute over examination results
- David Brewster’s and William Herschel’s experiments on inflection that delivered the coup de grâce to Thomas Young’s ether distribution hypothesis
- Popularizing precision: cultures of exactness at the Paris observatory, 1667–1742
- The promises and pitfalls of precision: random and systematic error in physical geodesy, c. 1800–1910
- Searching for precision: Lorenz Eichstadt’s Tabulae harmonicae coelestium motuum (Stetin 1644) and astronomical prediction after Kepler
- Directions of precision: George Graham’s instructions for his pendulum astronomical clocks
- On being sufficiently exact: assessing navigational instruments in the eighteenth century
- Francis Bacon and the practices of measurement
- Ole Rømer’s Triduum vol. I–III
- Inventing the language of Things: the emergence of scientific reporting in seventeenth-century England
- Engraving accuracy in early modern England: visual communication and the Royal Society
- Sound authorities: scientific and musical knowledge in nineteenth-century Britain
- The Doctor Who Wasn’t There: Technology, History, and the Limits of Telehealth
- Galilean resonances: the role of experiment in Turing’s construction of machine intelligence
- Understanding sovereignty through meteorology: China, Japan, and the dispute over the Qingdao Observatory, 1918–1931
- On Simon Mayr’s alleged discovery of Jupiter’s satellites
- A telescopic paradox: the artisans of the Accademia del Cimento, their instruments and their (in)visibility
- Kant & the Naturalistic Turn of 18th century philosophy
- Anachronisms in the History of Mathematics: Essays on the Historical Interpretation of Mathematical Texts
- Pierre Gassendi: humanism, science, and the birth of modern philosophy
- The two ‘strongest pillars of the empiricist wing’: the Vienna Circle, German academia and emigration in the light of correspondence between Philipp Frank and Richard von Mises (1916–1939)
- Knowledge flows in a global age: a transnational approach
- Norwegian climatology, the Republic of Letters and the Nordic Enlightenment science
- Norwegian climatology, the Republic of Letters and the Nordic Enlightenment
- Making physicians. Tradition, teaching, and trials at Leiden University, 1575–1639, vol. 1.
- The use of the conservation of living force before Helmholtz
- Analytical essay on the faculties of the soul
- A new history of greek mathematics
- The many histories of the conflict thesis: the science vs. religion narrative in nineteenth-century Germany
- The Optical Papers of Isaac Newton Volume II: The Opticks and Related Papers ca. 1688–1717
- Darwin’s dark matter: utter extinction
- 2Pal_C_Ranelagh_review
- Newton’s ‘De Aere et Aethere’ and the introduction of interparticulate forces into his physics
- Colonial rodent control in Tanganyika and the application of ecological frameworks
- Fertile substrate: the rise, fall, and succession of popular microscopy in Great Britain
- Nautical astrology: a forgotten early modern tradition
- Science diplomacy on display: mobile atomic exhibitions in the cold war: Introduction to Special Issue
- The ingredients of a successful atomic exhibition in Cold War Italy
- The photographers’ gaze: the Mobile Radioisotope Exhibition in Latin America (1960–1965)
- Establishing an experimental agenda at the Accademia del Cimento: Carlo Rinaldini’s book lists
- Celebrating the Czechoslovak atom: from ‘Atoms for Peace’ to Expo 58
- A German physicist’s travels in Great Britain Julius Plücker’s visits from 1853 to 1866
- Helmholtz and the conservation of energy: contexts of creation and reception
- Renaissance medicine: a short history of European medicine in the sixteenth century
- Magic, Science and Religion in Early Modern Europe
- On pestilence: a Renaissance treatise on plague
- Minerva Meets Vulcan: Scientific and Technological Literature – 1450–1750
- Cambridge geneticists and the chromosome theory of inheritance: William Bateson, Leonard Doncaster and Reginald Punnett 1879–1940
- Gradus Dimetiri: intensity and classification of complexions in 14th-century Italian medicine
- Scientific computing in the Cavendish Laboratory and the pioneering women computors
- Offering themselves by chance: Newcomen’s starting materials
- Anatomizing the pulse: Edmund King’s analogy, observation and conception of the tubular body
- Physico-mathematics and the life sciences: experiencing the mechanism of venous return, 1650s–1680s
- The elements: a visual history of their discovery
- Cold War social science: transnational entanglements
- Confessionalization and comets. John Bainbridge on the comet of 1618
- Mechanism. A visual, lexical and conceptual history
- Kindred fatalisms: debating science, Islam, and free will in the Darwinian era
- Minerva’s French Sisters: Women of Science in Enlightenment France
- The poison trials: wonder drugs, experiment, and the battle for authority in renaissance science
- Monteiro da Rocha and the international debate in the 1760s on astronomical methods to find the longitude at sea: his proposals and criticisms to Lacaille’s lunar-distance method
- Conceptualizing paradigms: on reading Kuhn’s history of the quantum
- The Harvest of Optics: Descartes, Mydorge, and their paths to a theory of refraction
- Astrology in the crossfire: the stormy debate after the comet of 1577
- The M de Jussieu’s ‘mirror of the Incas’: an ecuadorian archaeological artefact in the mineralogical collection of René-Just Haüy (1743-1822)
- Purkyně’s Opistophone: the hearing ‘Deaf’, auditory attention and organic subjectivity in Prague psychophysical experiments, ca 1850s
- Science on a mission: how military funding shaped what we do and don’t know about the ocean
- Immunization: How Vaccines Became Controversial
- Mapping the evolution of early modern natural philosophy: corpus collection and authority acknowledgement
- The ruling engines and diffraction gratings of Henry Augustus Rowland
- From the state of nature to the state of ruins: ‘American race’ and ‘savage knowledge’ according to Carl von Martius
- Guillaume des Moustiers’ treatise on the armillary instrument (1264) and the practice of astronomical observation in medieval Europe
- Heredity under the Microscope: Chromosomes and the Study of the Human Genome
- The place and significance of comparative trials in German agricultural writings around 1800
- Observations on Niccolò Tornioli’s The Astronomers
- The sense of movement. An intellectual history.
- Allegiance and Supremacy: Religion and the Royal Society’s 3rd Charter of 1669
- Atoms in the campus: Van de Graaff accelerators and the making of two major Latin American universities in 1950s Brazil and Mexico
- A mestizo cosmographer in the New Kingdom of Granada: astronomy and chronology in Sánchez de Cozar Guanientá’s Tratado (c.1696)
- The Experimental Fire: Inventing English Alchemy, 1300-1700
- Theoricae novae planetarum Georgii Peurbachii dans l’histoire de l’astronomie
- Geo-heliocentric models and the Society of Jesus: from Clavius’s resistance to Dechales’s Mathesis Regia
- Pasteur’s lifelong engagement with the fine arts: uncovering a scientist’s passion and personality
- A different kind of Nierenstein reaction. The Chemical Society’s mistreatment of Maximilian Nierenstein
- Medicine in ancient Assur, a microhistorical study of the Neo-Assyrian healer Kiṣir-Assur. Ancient magic and divination 18
- Isaac Newton’s ‘De gravitatione et aequipondio fluidorum’: its purpose in historical context
- The transmutations of chymistry. Wilhelm Homberg and the Académie Royale des Sciences
- Aurora borealis systems in the German-Russian world in the first half of the eighteenth century: the cases of Friedrich Christoph Mayer and Leonhard Euler
- Cutting words: polemical dimensions of Galen’s anatomical experiments. Studies in Ancient Medicine 55
- Healers, innovators, entrepreneurs: women in early modern healthcare
- Galen: A Thinking Doctor in Imperial Rome
- Forbidden knowledge: medicine, science, and censorship in early modern Italy
- Drugs on the Page: Pharmacopoeias and Healing Knowledge in the Early Modern Atlantic World
- Traces on a Muddy Shore. Science and religion in Colonial and Early Independent Río de la Plata
- Anna Zieglerin and the Lion’s blood: alchemy and end times in reformation Germany
- Counting human chromosomes before 1960: preconceptions, perceptions and predilections
- Winner of the Annals of Science Best Paper Prize for 2019
- Malleable Anatomies. Models, Makers, and Material Culture in Eighteenth-Century Italy
- Einstein in Bohemia
- After the flood. Imagining the global environment in early modern Europe
- The problem of Lysenkoism: why we cannot explain it away?
- Newton the alchemist: science, enigma, and the quest for nature’s ‘secret fire’
- Mineral and mineralogy in late Qing China: translations and conceptualizations, 1860s–1910s
- Constructing quantum mechanics, volume 1: the Scaffold 1900-1923
- Thomas Robert Malthus, naturalist of the mind
- History of ‘temperature’: maturation of a measurement concept
- ‘Ghosts from other planets’: plurality of worlds, afterlife and satire in Emanuel Swedenborg’s De Telluribus in mundo nostro solari (1758)
- John Hill (1716–1775) on ‘Plant Sleep’: experimental physiology and the limits of comparative analysis
- Linear Programming from Fibonacci to Farkas
- Francis Bacon, José de Acosta, and Traditions of Natural Histories of Winds
- A preliminary census of copies of the first edition of Newton’s Principia (1687)
- The making of John Tyndall’s Darwinian Revolution
- Charles Darwin did not mislead Joseph Hooker in their 1881 Correspondence about Leopold von Buch and Karl Ernst von Baer
- New insight into the origins of the calculus war
- ‘Enquiries on Plaister of Paris’: a material history of early agrochemical knowledge in the United States of America, 1785–1812
- Chemistry and slavery in the Scottish Enlightenment
- Atlantic chemistries, 1600–1820
- Alchemical and Paracelsian ideas in the Arte de los Metales
- Science, industry, and the German Bildungsbürgertum
- From influence to inhabitation: the transformation of astrobiology in the early modern period
- Failed utopias and practical chemistry: the Priestleys, the Du Ponts, and the transmission of transatlantic science, 1770–1820
- ‘Revolutions, philosophical as well as civil’: French chemistry and American science in Samuel Latham Mitchill’s Medical Repository
- Preludes to the Inquisition: self-censorship in medieval astrological discourse
- Inquisition and science: where do we stand now?
- The bounded heavens: defining the limits of astrological practice in the Iberian indices
- Newtonianism and information control in Rome at the wake of the eighteenth century
- Putting the Indices into practice: censoring science in early modern Portugal
- On the censorship of Tycho Brahe’s books in Iberia
- The Inquisition and the censorship of science in early modern Europe: Introduction
- Reconstructing Thomist astrology: Robert Bellarmine and the papal bull Coeli et terrae
- Re-examining the impact of European astronomy in seventeenth-century China: a study of Xue Fengzuo’s system of thought and his integration of Chinese and Western knowledge
- Between Kepler and Newton: Hooke’s ‘principles of congruity and incongruity’ and the naturalization of mathematics
- Melchior Inchofer, Giordano Bruno, and the soul of the world
- ‘One common matter’ in Descartes’ physics: the Cartesian concepts of matter quantities, weight and gravity
- Weighing light and pondering historiographies
- Russian eugenics in transnational and transhistorical perspective: from comparison to translation
- What is technology?
- Maligned for mathematics: Sir Thomas Urquhart and his Trissotetras
- Winner of the Annals of Science Prize for 2018
- Thrifty science: making the most of materials in the history of experiment
- Knowledge in translation: global patterns of scientific exchange, 1000–1800 CE
- The life and legend of James Watt: collaboration, natural philosophy, and the improvement of the steam engine
- Germany’s ancient pasts: archaeology and historical interpretation since 1700
- The Spanish disquiet: the biblical natural philosophy of Benito Arias Montano
- Inside science: Stories from the field in human and animal science
- Greening the alliance: the diplomacy of NATO’s science and environmental initiatives
- ‘And Eden from the Chaos rose’: utopian order and rebellion in the Oxford Physick Garden
- Photons. The history and mental models of light quanta
- The well-ordered universe: the philosophy of Margaret Cavendish
- Standing colossus: Newton and the French
- The ascent of John Tyndall: Victorian scientist, mountaineer, and public intellectual
- Worlds of natural history
- For the love of science: the correspondence of J. H. de Magellan (1722–1790)
- Recipes and everyday knowledge: medicine, science, and the household in early modern England
- Burned alive: Giordano Bruno, Galileo and the Inquisition
- Instrumental causes and the natural origin of souls in Antonio Ponce Santacruz’s theory of animal generation
- Visiting Newton’s atelier before the Principia, 1679–1684
- Visiting Newton’s atelier before the Principia, 1679–1684
- Helmholtz, the conservation of force and the conservation of vis viva
- An ‘experimental’ instrument: testing the torsion balance in Britain, Canada and Australia
- The pursuit of harmony: Kepler on cosmos, confession, and community
- The patent medicines industry in Georgian England
- The scientific journal. Authorship and the politics of knowledge in the nineteenth century
- Cultivating commerce: cultures of botany in Britain and France, 1760-1815
- A history of the future: prophets of progress from H. G. Wells to Isaac Asimov
- History within: the science, culture, and politics of bones, organisms, and molecules
- The religion of the young Isaac Newton
- Ruling engines and diffraction gratings before Rowland: the work of Lewis Rutherfurd and William Rogers
- The circulation of penicillin in Spain: health, wealth and authority
- The voyage of thought: navigating knowledge across the sixteenth-century world
- Henry Bate’s Tabule Machlinenses: the earliest astronomical tables by a Latin author
- The pre-raphaelites and science
- Winner of the Annals of Science Prize for 2017
- Instruments of statecraft: Humphrey Cole, Elizabethan economic policy and the rise of practical mathematics
- The first mite: insect genealogy in Hooke’s Micrographia
- Making stars physical: the astronomy of Sir John Herschel
- Science writing in Greco-Roman antiquity
- Reading Newton in early modern Europe
- The young René Descartes—lawyer, military engineer, courtier, diplomat … and, we might add, ambitious ‘savant’
- Writing tea’s empire
- Of making many Darwins
- Medicine in first world war Europe: soldiers, medics, pacifists
- Henry David Thoreau: A Life
- Henry David Thoreau: A life
- The origins and early years of the Magnetic and Meteorological department at Greenwich Observatory, 1834-1848
- Resurrecting Maunder’s ghost: John ‘Jack’ Eddy, the Maunder Minimum, and the rise of a dilettante astrophysicist
- Navigational enterprises in Europe and its empires, 1730–1850
- Hippocrates’ complaint and the scientific ethos in early modern England
- ‘The Great Fiasco’ of the 1948 presidential election polls: status recognition and norms conflict in social science
- Science museums in transition: cultures of display in nineteenth-century Britain and America
- Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939
- Science without Frontiers: Cosmopolitanism and National Interests in the World of Learning, 1870-1940
- Science without frontiers: cosmopolitanism and national interests in the world of learning, 1870-1940
- Vaunting the independent amateur: Scientific American and the representation of lay scientists
- Levitation: The Science, Myth, and Magic of Suspension
- Science in the Archives: Pasts, Presents, Futures
- The Lighthouse and the Observatory: Islam, Science, and Empire in Late Ottoman Egypt
- John Wilkins (1614–1672): New Essays
- Thomas Reid on Mathematics and Natural Philosophy
- Eugenics: A Very Short Introduction
- Eugenics: a very short introduction
- Bloomsbury Scientists: Science and Art in the Wake of Darwin
- Henry Dresser and Victorian Ornithology: Birds, Books and Business
- Masculinity and Science in Britain, 1830–1918
- One Hundred Years of Pressure: Hydrostatics from Stevin to Newton
- ‘Great is Darwin and Bergson his poet’: Julian Huxley’s other evolutionary synthesis
- The Chinese Typewriter: A History
- Reading Galileo: Scribal Technologies and the Two New Sciences
- The Paper Zoo: 500 Years of Animals in Art
- The rise of alternative bread leavening technologies in the nineteenth century
- Analogies that shape the recent history of radiation
- Can diplopia reshape our views of perspective?
- Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection
- The Use of Humans in Experiment: Perspectives from the 17th to the 20th Century
- The story of ‘Scientist: The Story of a Word’
- Ruling Minds: Psychology in the British Empire
- Eye for Detail: Images of Plants and Animals in Art and Science 1500–1630
- Tracings of the north of Europe: Robert Chambers in search of the Ice Age
- Global Spencerism: The Communication and Appropriation of a British Evolutionist
- The Body as Object and Instrument of Knowledge: Embodied Empiricism in Early Modern Science
- Qualitative vs quantitative conceptions of homogeneity in nineteenth century dimensional analysis
- A frosty disagreement: John Tyndall, James David Forbes, and the early formation of the X-Club
- What Makes a Good Experiment? Reasons and Roles in Science
- How Scientific Instruments Have Changed Hands
- Einstein and Twentieth-Century Politics: ‘A Salutary Moral Influence’
- Winner of the Annals of Science Prize for 2016
- Natures in Translation: Romanticism and Colonial Natural History
- What motion is: William Neile and the laws of motion
- Horticulture in Portugal 1850–1900: The role of science and public utility in shaping knowledge
- Darwin and Women: A Selection of Letters
- The Life Organic: The Theoretical Biology Club and the Roots of Epigenetics
- Evolution Made to Order: Plant Breeding and Technological Innovation in Twentieth-Century America
- Making Kin, Making Trouble: Donna Haraway’s Critical Ongoingness
- Field Life: Science in the American West During the Railroad Era
- Framing the transit: expeditionary culture and identities in Lieutenant E.J.W. Noble’s caricatures of the 1874 transit of Venus expedition to Honolulu
- The Experimental Self: Humphry Davy and the Making of a Man of Science
- ‘Let the stars shine in peace!’ Niels Bohr and stellar energy, 1929–1934
- Navigation. A Very Short Introduction
- Success and Suppression: Arabic Sciences and Philosophy in the Renaissance
- The Science of Sympathy: Morality, Evolution, and Victorian Civilization
- How to Do Science with Models: A Philosophical Primer
- Orchid: A Cultural History
- Murder and the Making of English CSI
- Different shades of Newton: Herman Boerhaave on Newton mathematicus, philosophus, and optico-chemicus
- Craft, money and mercy: an apothecary’s self-portrait in sixteenth-century Bologna
- Life’s Greatest Secret: The Race to Crack the Genetic Code
- A Companion to the History of Science
- Multiple Autisms: Spectrums of Advocacy and Genomic Science
- Strange Science: Investigating the Limits of Knowledge in the Victorian Age
- Changing techniques in crop plant classification: molecularization at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany during the 1980s
- Heredity Explored: Between Public Domain and Experimental Science, 1850–1930
- Sharing Knowledge, Shaping Europe: US Technological Collaboration and Nonproliferation
- Copernicus: A Very Short Introduction
- Charles Darwin and the Church of Wordsworth
- Scientific Governance in Britain 1914–79
- Europe’s Infrastructure Transition: Economy, War, Nature