26 August 2021
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Pankaj Sekhsaria. Instrumental Lives: An Intimate Biography of an Indian Laboratory. -
Paul J. Nahin. Hot Molecules, Cold Electrons: From the Mathematics of Heat to the Development of the Trans-Atlantic Cable. -
Underground Inspirations: Tuber Sciences and Their Histories -
HSS Virtual Forum: Futures Series -
Eugenia Lean. Vernacular Industrialism in China: Local Innovation and Translated Technologies in the Making of a Cosmetics Empire, 1900–1940. -
Danielle Giffort. Acid Revival: The Psychedelic Renaissance and the Quest for Medical Legitimacy. -
Sebastian Vehlken. Zootechnologies: A Media History of Swarm Research. -
Ulrike Kirchberger; Brett M. Bennett, eds. Environments of Empire: Networks and Agents of Ecological Change. -
Arleen Marcia Tuchman. Diabetes: A History of Race and Disease. -
Peter Ayres. Women and the Natural Sciences in Edwardian Britain: In Search of Fellowship. -
Frances E. Dolan. Digging the Past: How and Why to Imagine Seventeenth-Century Agriculture. -
Bruno Belhoste; trans. by Susan Emanuel. Paris Savant: Capital of Science in the Age of Enlightenment. -
Emmanuel Didier; trans. by Priya Vari Sen. America by the Numbers: Quantification, Democracy, and the Birth of National Statistics. -
Lara Freidenfelds. The Myth of the Perfect Pregnancy: A History of Miscarriage in America. -
Antonio Badia. The Information Manifold: Why Computers Can’t Solve Algorithmic Bias and Fake News. -
Elizabeth Baigent; André Reyes Novaes, eds. Geographers: Biobibliographical Studies. -
Jost Lemmerich. Max von Laue—Furchtlos und treu: Eine Biographie des Nobelpreisträgers für Physik. -
Jaipreet Virdi. Hearing Happiness: Deafness Cures in History. -
The Truth Within: Making Medical Knowledge in the Hay Fever Association of Heligoland, 1899–1909 -
Arne Schirrmacher. Establishing Quantum Physics in Göttingen: David Hilbert, Max Born, and Peter Debye in Context, 1900–1926. -
Mistress of the Sciences, Asylum of Liberty: Joseph Priestley, Human Rights, and Science in the Early U.S. Republic -
Rethinking Collaboration: Medical Research and Working Relationships at the Iranian Pasteur Institute -
Christian Reiß. Der Axolotl: Ein Labortier im Heimaquarium 1864–1914. -
Crafting Digital Histories of Science: A Review and Tour of Secrets of Craft and Nature in Renaissance France -
Brian C. Odom; Stephen P. Waring, eds. NASA and the Long Civil Rights Movement. -
Juan Carlos González Espitia. Sifilografía: A History of the Writerly Pox in the Eighteenth-Century Hispanic World. -
Isabel Malaquias; Peter J. T. Morris, eds. Perspectives on Chemical Biography in the Twenty-First Century. -
Jennifer Johung. Vital Forms: Biological Art, Architecture, and the Dependencies of Life. -
A “Wild Swing to Phantsy”: The Philosophical Gardener and Emergent Experimental Philosophy in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World -
History of Science Society Virtual Forum, 2020 -
Richard Noakes. Physics and Psychics: The Occult and the Sciences in Modern Britain. -
Charles H. Smith; James T. Costa; David A. Collard, eds. An Alfred Russel Wallace Companion. -
Nikolaus Egel, ed. Roger Bacon, Opus Tertium. -
Eloge: Howard P. Segal (1948–2020) -
Hermann Hunger; John Steele. The Babylonian Astronomical Compendium MUL.APIN. -
Per Pippin Aspaas; László Kontler. Maximilian Hell (1720–92) and the Ends of Jesuit Science in Enlightenment Europe. -
Nikolai Krementsov. With and Without Galton: Vasilii Florinskii and the Fate of Eugenics in Russia. -
An Epidemic for Sale: Observation, Modification, and Commercial Circulation of the Danysz Virus, 1890–1910 -
Dag Nikolaus Hasse; Amos Bertolacci, eds. The Arabic, Hebrew and Latin Reception of Avicenna’s Physics and Cosmology. -
Trisha T. Pritikin; introduction by Karen Dorn Steele. The Hanford Plaintiffs: Voices from the Fight for Atomic Justice. -
Hanif Ghalandari. ʿAbd al-Jabbār al-Kharaqī’s Muntaha al-Idrāk fī Taqāsīm al-Aflāk (Ultimate Comprehension of the Subdivision of Celestial Spheres: The First Comprehensive hay’a Work on Ptolemaic Cosmology). -
Dwaipayan Banerjee. Enduring Cancer: Life, Death, and Diagnosis in Delhi. -
Francesco Paolo de Ceglia. The Body of Evidence: Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine. -
Christian K. Kleinbub. Michelangelo’s Inner Anatomies. -
Ronald S. Coddington. Faces of Civil War Nurses. -
Moral Phenomenology -
Predictive coding III: The algorithmic level -
Reading Ancient and Medieval Philosophers after Vollenhoven -
Wanting what’s not best -
Dignification of Victims Through Exhumations in Colombia -
Correction to: How Do Social Structures Become Taken for Granted? Social Reproduction in Calm and Crisis -
The justification of comprehension-based beliefs -
Sympathetic Respect, Respectful Sympathy -
A road map for Feynman’s adventures in the land of gravitation -
Cinema, Philosophy and Education -
The Efficacy of the Integrative Model Proposed by Prieto Ramos (2014) in Surmounting Terminological Problems of Arabic-English Legal Translation -
A Logical Encounter of the Schrödinger’s Cat Paradox -
Coercion in Social Accounts of Law: Can Coerciveness Undermine Legality? -
‘And Therefore I Hasten to Return My Ticket’: Anti-theodicy Radicalised - Number of publications for this day: 59
25 August 2021
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The twin origins of renormalization group concepts -
Faith and Philosophy: Richard Swinburne and the Analytic Philosophy of Religion – An Interview -
Stakeholder theory and the knowledge problem: A Hayekian perspective -
Prediction of cardiovascular disease using deep learning algorithms to prevent COVID 19 -
THE NATURE OF TIME AS A PUZZLE FOR NATURALISM -
Social sensitivity and the ethics of attention -
Essentializing inferences -
‘Please don’t destroy until it’s completely destroyed’: Arts of education towards democracy -
Thinking and learning in the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze -
Ants, grasshoppers, asshoppers, and crickets cohabit in Utopia: the anthropological foundations of Bernard Suits’ analyses of gameplay and good living -
Rodolphe Gasché, “Locating Europe: A Figure, a Concept, an Idea?” -
Zena Hitz, “Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life.” -
Martin Koci and Jason Alvis (eds.), “Transforming the Theological Turn: Phenomenology with Emmanuel Falque.” -
Tae-Yeoun Keum, “Plato and the Mythic Tradition in Political Thought.” -
Michael Skerker, “The Moral Status of Combatants: A New Theory of Just War.” -
Emily Thomas, “The Meaning of Travel: Philosophers Abroad.” -
Damon Young, “On Getting Off: Sex and Philosophy.” -
Steven Levine, “Pragmatism, Objectivity, and Experience.” -
First saying, then believing: The pragmatic roots of folk psychology -
(Un)mask yourself! Effects of face masks on facial mimicry and emotion perception during the COVID-19 pandemic -
DEFENDING AESTHETIC EDUCATION -
Impartiality -
“One injustice can never become a legitimate reason to commit another”: Condorcet, women’s political rights, and social reform during the French Revolution (1789–1795) -
The Theological Origins and Underpinning of the Longing for Total Revolution -
Announcing the First Society & Animals Early Career Research Prize -
Steven French: There Are No Such Things as Theories -
From groundlessness—to freedom: The theme of ‘awakening’ in the thought of Lev Shestov -
Practice variation in the informed consent procedure for thrombolysis in acute ischemic stroke: a survey among neurologists and neurology residents -
Epidemiological models and COVID-19: a comparative view -
Happy Soldiers are Highest Performers -
Metasequents and Tetravaluations -
A Categorical Equivalence for Tense Nelson Algebras -
Cookson, R., Griffin, S., Norheim, O. F., & Culyer, A. J. (Eds.). (2020). Distributional Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Quantifying Health Equity Impacts and Trade-Offs. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Paperback (ISBN-13: 9780198838197). £ 28.03. 365 pp -
Demystifying Manhattan -
What caused the Ice Age extinctions? -
Review of Gottfried Gabriel & Sven Schlotter, Frege und die kontinentalen Ursprünge der analytischen Philosophie -
An Argument for Completely General Facts -
Andrius Galisanka: John Rawls: The Path to A Theory of Justice -
Science and policy in extremis: the UK’s initial response to COVID-19 -
Better learning through history: using archival resources to teach healthcare ethics to science students -
Knowledge is a mental state (at least sometimes)