Notes on Contributors
2010; University of Chicago Press; Volume: 101; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1086/664964
ISSN1545-6994
Tópico(s)Philippine History and Culture
ResumoPrevious articleNext article FreeNotes on ContributorsNotes on ContributorsPDFPDF PLUSFull Text Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmailQR Code SectionsMoreGarland E. Allen teaches biology and the history of science at Washington University in St. Louis. He specializes in the history of genetics and its relations to evolution, development, and eugenics in the twentieth century. He served as President of the International Society for the History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Biology (2005–2007) and is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2009).Katharine Anderson is an associate professor in the Science and Technology Studies Program at York University. She is the author of Predicting the Weather: Victorians and the Science of Meteorology (Chicago, 2005).Richard H. Armstrong is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Houston. His main interests lie in the receptions of classical culture, particularly with reference to translation and the history of psychoanalysis. His latest book is A Compulsion for Antiquity: Freud and the Ancient World (Cornell, 2005).Richard Barnett ([email protected]) is a Teaching Associate in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge. His publications include Medical London: City of Diseases, City of Cure (Strange Attractor Press, 2008).Heather Barnick is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Social Anthropology at York University in Toronto. Her research interests include the anthropology of media, visual culture, and game design. In May 2010 she began ethnographic fieldwork investigating the linkages of China's massive multiplayer online role playing game industry to emerging notions of cultural and national identity in Shanghai.Antonio Barrera‐Osorio is Associate Professor of History at Colgate University. His areas of interest are history of science and history of the Atlantic world. His book, Experiencing Nature: The Spanish American Empire and the Early Scientific Revolution (University of Texas Press, 2006), explores the emergence of empirical practices in the Spanish‐American Empire. His current book manuscript, “The Atlantic World and the Scientific Revolution,” studies the interactions between Spain, England, and the Atlantic world and the emergence of modern science.Ingrid Baumgärtner (http://cms.uni‐kassel.de/unicms/index.php?id=mittelalter) is Professor of Medieval History and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Kassel and, since 2007, Research Associate at the Villa I Tatti, the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies in Florence. She has published on medieval and early modern cartography.Richard Bellon teaches history of science at Michigan State University, where he holds a joint appointment in the Lyman Briggs College of Science and the Department of History. He has published extensively on the social and cultural place of natural history in Victorian Britain. His current research focuses on the reception of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species.Richard Beyler is Associate Professor of History at Portland State University, where he teaches history of science and European intellectual history and researches the social history of German scientific institutions in the twentieth century.Justin Biddle is an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. His research interests are in philosophy of science, philosophy of medicine, biomedical ethics, and science and technology policy.Amy Sue Bix is an associate professor of history at Iowa State University and head of the Ph.D. Program in History of Technology and Science. She is finishing a book titled Engineering Education for American Women: An Intellectual, Institutional, and Social History.Victor Boantza received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in history and philosophy of science. He is now a postdoctoral fellow at McGill University, where he works on the history of early modern science; he is completing a book project on (al)chemistry during the seventeenth and eigteenth centuries, from Boyle to Lavoisier.Stephan Boehm teaches economics in the Faculty of Social and Economic Studies at the Karl‐Franzens University in Graz, Austria. He has published in the history of economic thought and methodology, Austrian economics, and Schumpeterian economics. He was chairman of the Graz Schumpeter Society.Arianna Borrelli has done research in high energy physics and worked as a historian and philosopher of science on medieval mathematical cosmology, early modern meteorology, and quantum mechanics in Italy, Switzerland, and Germany. She is now participating in a project on the “Epistemology of the LHC” at Wuppertal University.Emily K. Brock is Assistant Professor of History at the University of South Carolina. Her current research focuses on the intersections between science, industry, and wilderness in twentieth‐century American forests.Keynyn Brysse studies the history and philosophy of paleontology. Her Ph.D. dissertation, completed at the University of Toronto, explored the recent reclassifications of the Burgess Shale fossils, while her M.A. thesis (University of Alberta) examined the mass extinction debates. She is now a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Princeton University.Marta Cavazza is Associate Professor of History of Science in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Bologna. Her research concentrates primarily on early modern Italian scientific institutions, on the participation of women in those of eighteenth‐century Bologna, and on the Enlightenment debate on gender, culture, and society.Joseph W. Dauben is Professor of History and History of Science at Herbert H. Lehman College (CUNY). A former editor of Historia Mathematica and a past chairman of the International Commission on the History of Mathematics, he is the author of biographies of Georg Cantor and Abraham Robinson.Peter Dear is a professor in both the Department of History and the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University. A new edition of his Revolutionizing the Sciences: European Knowledge and Its Ambitions, 1500–1700, appeared in 2009 from Princeton University Press.Matthijs de Ridder is a postdoctoral researcher and teaching assistant at the University of Antwerp, working on Dutch and Flemish literary history. He is the author of Aan Borms: Willem Elsschot, een politiek schrijver (2007) and Ouverture 1912: Literatuur en Vlaamse Beweging aan de vooravond van de Grote Oorlog (2008).Brian Dolan is Professor of Social Medicine and Medical Humanities at the University of California, San Francisco. He recently produced a documentary called Visionary Medicine: The Invention of MRI and the Origins of Bio‐Entrepreneurship and is working on a second film documenting the function of venture capital in the new health care economy.Heather Douglas is an associate professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Tennessee. Her book, Science, Policy, and the Value‐Free Ideal, was published in 2009 by the University of Pittsburgh Press.Erika Dyck is a Tier Two Canada Research Chair in the History of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan. She is the author of Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD from Clinic to Campus and is now working on a comparative history of eugenics in Alberta and Saskatchewan.Fa‐ti Fan is the author of British Naturalists in Qing China: Science, Empire, and Cultural Encounter (Harvard, 2004) and is now writing a book on earthquake studies in Communist China. He teaches at the State University of New York at Binghamton.Mike Fortun is an associate professor in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the author of Promising Genomics: Iceland and deCODE Genetics in a World of Speculation (University of California Press, 2008).Scott Frickel is Associate Professor of Sociology at Washington State University. He is the author of Chemical Consequences: Environmental Mutagens, Scientist Activism, and the Rise of Genetic Toxicology (Rutgers, 2004) and is now working on a study of ignorance production in post‐Katrina New Orleans.Charlotte Furth is Professor Emerita of Chinese History at the University of Southern California. She is the author of A Flourishing Yin: Gender in China's Medical History, 960–1665, and a coeditor of and contributor to Thinking with Cases: Specialist Knowledge in Chinese Cultural History (2007) and Health and Hygiene in Chinese East Asia: Policies and Publics in the Long Twentieth Century (2010).Daniel Garber is Stuart Professor and Chair in the Department of Philosophy at Princeton University and Associated Faculty in the Program in the History of Science and the Department of Politics. He works mostly on history of philosophy and history of science in the early modern period.Daniel Gasman is Professor Emeritus of History at John Jay College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He has lectured on the political and cultural significance of Ernst Haeckel as a Directeur d'Etudes at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris (1987) and is the author of The Scientific Origins of National Socialism: Social Darwinism in Ernst Haeckel and the German Monist League (1971, 2004) and Haeckel's Monism and the Birth of Fascist Ideology (1998, 2008). He is currently writing a history of the international relationship between Haeckel's scientific Monism, nationalism, and Marxism.Michael D. Gordin is Professor of History at Princeton University. He is the author of three books, including most recently Red Cloud at Dawn: Truman, Stalin, and the End of the Atomic Monopoly (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2009), and coeditor of Osiris, Volume 23 (2008), on Russian science.Jeremy Gray is Professor of the History of Mathematics at the Open University in England.Christopher D. Green teaches in the History and Theory of Psychology Program at York University in Toronto. He is the coauthor of Early Psychological Thought: Ancient Accounts of Mind and Soul (with Philip Groff) (Praeger 2003) and the coeditor of The Transformation of Psychology: Influences of nineteenth‐Century Philosophy, Technology, and Natural Science (with Marlene Shore and Thomas Teo) (APA 2001) and Psychology Gets in the Game: Sport, Mind, and Behavior, 1880–1960 (with Ludy Benjamin) (Nebraska 2009). His recent research focused on the impact of evolutionary thought on the development of psychology at the turn of the twentieth century. He is currently working on a book about how the cultural characters of particular American cities influenced the kinds of psychology that arose in each.Sara S. Gronim is an associate professor of history at the C. W. Post campus of Long Island University. She is the author of Everyday Nature: Knowledge of the Natural World in Colonial New York (2007) and several articles on colonial science. Her current work is on cultures of mathematics.Alan Gross is Professor of Communication Studies at the University of Minnesota, specializing in scientific communication. His most recent book is The Craft of Scientific Communication (Chicago, 2010). With his longtime collaborator, Joseph Harmon of Argonne National Laboratories, he is completing a book on verbal–visual interaction in science.Caroline Hannaway is a historical consultant in Baltimore, Maryland. She is Associate Editor of the Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, and she recently edited Biomedicine in the Twentieth Century: Practices, Policies, and Politics (IOS Press, 2008). Her research interests include twentieth‐century American medicine and eighteenth‐ and nineteenth‐century French medicine.Jon M. Harkness was a consulting staff member to the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments in the mid‐1990s. He is now an adjunct faculty member in the University of Minnesota's Program in the History of Medicine and a 3L at Hamline University School of Law in St. Paul.Peter Heering is a professor of physics and physics didactics at the Universität Flensburg. His research focuses on the history of experimental practices, the relation between research and teaching experiments, and the use of history of science in science education. He recently coedited Playing with Fire: Histories of the Lightning Rod (American Philosophical Society, 2009) and Experimentelle Wissenschaftsgeschichte (Fink, 2010).Tofigh Heidarzadeh is a History of Science Educator at the Huntington Library and teaches at the University of California, Riverside. He has published on the history of astronomy and post‐Newtonian physical sciences. One of the subjects he is now working on is the introduction of modern physical sciences in Iran.J. L. Heilbron, Emeritus Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley, was a frequent contributor to the original DSB and an editor of its second supplement. Being beyond tenure, he has recently completed a biography of Galileo, to be published in October by Oxford University Press.Klaus Hentschel is Head of the Section for History of Science and Technology at Stuttgart University. He recently organized exhibitions on the visualization of late medieval machine drawings with modern media and on the history of materials used in the construction of Zeppelin airships: see www.uni‐stuttgart.de/hi/gnt/ausstellungen.Stephen Hilgartner is Chair of the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University. His book on science advice, Science on Stage: Expert Advice as Public Drama, won the Rachel Carson Prize from the Society for Social Studies of Science.Daniel Holbrook is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.Nick Hopwood is Senior Lecturer in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, where he runs a Wellcome Trust–funded research program on “Generation to Reproduction” (www.reproduction.group.cam.ac.uk). With Simon Schaffer and Jim Secord he recently edited Seriality and Scientific Objects in the Nineteenth Century, a special double issue of History of Science.Sheila Jasanoff is Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies at the Harvard Kennedy School. A pioneer in her field, she has authored more than a hundred articles and chapters and is the author or editor of a dozen books, including Controlling Chemicals, The Fifth Branch, Science at the Bar, and Designs on Nature. Her work explores the role of science and technology in the law, politics, and policy of modern democracies, with particular attention to the nature of public reason. She was founding chair of the STS Department at Cornell University and has held numerous distinguished visiting appointments in the United States, Europe, and Japan. She served on the Board of Directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and as President of the Society for Social Studies of Science. Her grants and awards include a 2010 Guggenheim Fellowship and an Ehrenkreuz from the Government of Austria. She holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Twente.Ludmilla Jordanova is Professor of Modern History at King's College, London, the author of Defining Features: Scientific and Medical Portraits, 1660–2000 (2000), and a member of the Wellcome‐funded Centre for Humanities and Health at King's. She is now writing about historians' use of visual and material evidence.Kevin Killeen is a lecturer in Renaissance literature at the University of York. He is the author of Biblical Scholarship, Science, and Politics in Early Modern England: Thomas Browne and the Thorny Place of Knowledge (2008) and coeditor of Biblical Exegesis and the Emergence of Science in the Early Modern Era (2007).Eberhard Knobloch is Emeritus Professor of History of Science and Technology at the Technical University of Berlin, President of the International Academy of the History of Science (Paris), and the author of about three hundred scientific publications. His main interests concern history and philosophy of the mathematical sciences.Robert E. Kohler is Emeritus Professor of the History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania. He writes on the institutions and practices of modern science, especially the field sciences. His books include Lords of the Fly: Drosophila Genetics and the Experimental Life (1994), Landscapes and Labscapes: Exploring the Lab–Field Border in Biology (2002); and All Creatures: Naturalists, Collectors, and Biodiversity, 1850–1950 (2006).Alexei Kojevnikov teaches history of science and Russian history in the Department of History at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. He is the author of Stalin's Great Science: The Times and Adventures of Soviet Physicists (London, 2004) and a coeditor of Intelligentsia Science: The Russian Century, 1860–1960 (Osiris, 2008, 23). His latest work is the volume Weimar Culture and Quantum Mechanics: Selected Papers by Paul Forman and Contemporary Perspectives on the Forman Thesis (World Scientific, in press), edited with Cathryn Carson and Helmuth Trischler.Philip Kreager is Lecturer in Human Sciences in Somerville College at Oxford University. His historical research traces the Aristotelian tradition of open or network population thinking that prevailed in Europe up to the late eighteenth century and its later reconceptualization by Darwin and contributors to the evolutionary synthesis.W. R. Laird is an associate professor of history in Ottawa, where he teaches medieval history and the history of science. He is the author of The Unfinished Mechanics of Giuseppe Moletti and is now completing a history of mechanics in the sixteenth century titled The Renaissance of Mechanics.Karl‐Heinz Leven is Chair of the History of Medicine at the University of Erlangen‐Nuremberg. His research interests include ancient and Byzantine medicine, history of epidemics, and medicine in National Socialist Germany.Trevor Levere is University Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto. He has written extensively on the history of chemistry, on scientific instruments, on Coleridge and Romantic science, and on Arctic exploration. He is writing, with others, a book on Dr. Thomas Beddoes and his networks and projects.G. E. R. Lloyd is a historian of ancient Greek and Chinese science at the University of Cambridge. He is Senior Scholar in Residence at the Needham Research Institute. His most recent book is Disciplines in the Making: Cross‐Cultural Perspectives on Elites, Learning, and Innovation (2009).Paul Lucier studies the earth and environmental sciences and their interplay with the mining industry. He surveyed the fraught relations among scientific truth, commercial profit, public good, and private gain in Scientists and Swindlers: Consulting on Coal and Oil in America (1820–1890) (Johns Hopkins, 2008) and is now exploring the gold and silver discoveries in the late nineteenth‐century American West.Steven Matthews is Assistant Professor of History and McKnight Land‐Grant Professor at the University of Minnesota, Duluth. In research and teaching he specializes in the history of Christianity (patristic and Reformation emphases) and the history of science, with a focus on the foundations of both.Seymour Mauskopf teaches the history of science at Duke University. His published works include Crystals and Compounds and Chemical Sciences in the Modern World. He is now working on a book on Alfred Nobel's interactions with British munitions scientists in the late nineteenth century.Craig McConnell is Associate Professor of Liberal Studies at California State University, Fullerton, and Director of the CSUF Center for History and Philosophy of Science, Technology, and Medicine. He writes on the history of the popular dimensions of modern cosmology.Donna C. Mehos is Senior Researcher at the Faculty of Technology, Policy, and Management, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands. She has written on various topics in nineteenth‐ and twentieth‐century science and technology, including her book Science and Culture for Members Only: The Amsterdam Zoo Artis in the Nineteenth Century (Amsterdam University Press, 2006).Gregory H. Moore, a professor of mathematics at McMaster University, is an editor of the Collected Works of Kurt Gödel and of the Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell. On the history of set theory he has published many articles and the book Zermelo's Axiom of Choice: Its Origins, Development, and Influence.Iwan Rhys Morus is Reader in History at Aberystwyth University and the editor of History of Science. He is the author of When Physics Became King (2005) and coauthor of Making Modern Science (2005). His latest book, Shocking Bodies, will appear in 2011.Natasha Myers is Assistant Professor in the Departments of Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies at York University. Her forthcoming book, Molecular Embodiments: Modeling Proteins and Making Scientists in the Contemporary Biosciences, examines cultures of pedagogy and visualization among protein crystallographers and biological engineers and will be published by Duke University Press.Nerio Naldi is an associate professor of economics in the Faculty of Statistics at the University of Rome. His main research interests are in the fields of classical, Keynesian, and Sraffian economics and the reconstruction of Piero Sraffa's intellectual biography.Jaume Navarro is a Humboldt scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, and an affiliate researcher in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge. His main research interest is the history of physics in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, especially in the British context.Robert Olby has taught the history of science at the University of Pittsburgh since 1994. Now retired, he continues there as Research Professor. His book Francis Crick: Hunter of Life's Secrets was published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press in 2009.Matthew Osborn is Associate Professor of History and Environmental Studies at Green Mountain College in Poultney, Vermont, an environmental, liberal arts college. His research interests include the history of industrialization in Britain, British environmental history, and the environmental history of Europe.Dorinda Outram is Franklin I. and Gladys W. Clark Professor of History at the University of Rochester. She has published widely on the history of science, the French Revolution, the history of exploration, and the intellectual and cultural history of the Enlightenment. She is now working on religion in the Enlightenment.Lydia Patton is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Virginia Tech. She has recently published articles in Studies in History and Philosophy of Science and The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and she has an article forthcoming in Kant‐Studien.Volker Peckhaus is a professor of philosophy of science and technology in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at the University of Paderborn. His main fields of research are history of modern logic and history and philosophy of mathematics. He is Editor‐in‐Chief of the journal History and Philosophy of Logic.F. Jamil Ragep is Canada Research Chair in the History of Science in Islamic Societies and Director of the Institute of Islamic Studies at McGill University. He is currently leading an international effort to catalogue all Islamic manuscripts in the exact sciences and codirecting a project to study the fifteenth‐century background to the Copernican revolution.Melissa Rickman, Reference and Instruction Librarian and Lecturer at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma, Chickasha, is a doctoral candidate at the University of Oklahoma, writing on the life and work of John Gerard.Nicolas Robin is a Clusius visiting research professor for cultural history of gardens and natural science collections at the Scaliger Institute at Leiden University and an assistant professor and coordinator of the Ph.D. school “Experimentieren im mathematisch‐naturwissenschaftlichen Unterricht” at the Freiburg University of Education.Margaret W. Rossiter, the Marie Underhill Noll Professor of the History of Science at Cornell University, has recently completed her third volume on the history of women scientists in the United States. It covers the period since 1972. She was the Editor of Isis from 1994 to 2003.Jane Samson is Professor of History at the University of Alberta. Her current research interests include Victorian religion, missionary anthropology in the Pacific world, indigenous clergy, and historical lexicology.Jonathan Seitz is an assistant teaching professor at Drexel University. He is now investigating the interactions between ideas about nature and about the supernatural and the disputes over who held reliable, authoritative knowledge about those two categories in early modern Europe.Hugh Richard Slotten teaches at the University of Otago. He has authored many works, including Radio and Television Regulation: Broadcast Technology in the United States, 1920–1960 (Johns Hopkins, 2000), and Radio's Hidden Voice: The Origins of Public Broadcasting in the United States (Illinois, 2009).Jonathan Smith is Professor of English and Director of Science and Technology Studies at the University of Michigan—Dearborn. He is the author of Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2006) and numerous articles on Victorian literature, science, and culture.Keith Snedegar is Professor of History at Utah Valley University. His research interests include indigenous astronomical practices of southern African peoples and the history of European science in South Africa. He is currently working on a biography of the South African astronomer and politician Alex W. Roberts.Stephen D. Snobelen is a historian of science who teaches in the History of Science and Technology Programme at the University of King's College, Halifax, Nova Scotia. He specializes in science and religion, the popularization of science, and Isaac Newton.Geert Somsen teaches history of science at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands. His research focuses on ideological uses of science in Western democracies, from the late nineteenth century to the Cold War.Jonathan Spiro is Chair of the Department of History at Castleton State College in Vermont. His recent book, Defending the Master Race: Conservation, Eugenics, and the Legacy of Madison Grant, traces the history of—and explains the connections between—the eugenics movement, the conservation movement, and the nature/nurture debate.Richard Staley is an associate professor of the history of science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he teaches history of physics. He is the author of Einstein's Generation: The Origins of the Relativity Revolution (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008) and is now interested in the cultural history of mechanics and in physics and anthropology.Alice Stroup is Professor of History at Bard College (Annandale‐on‐Hudson, New York) and the author of works concerning the Académie Royale des Sciences (Paris), as well as science and dissidence, during the reign of Louis XIV.Kenneth L. Taylor is Professor Emeritus of the History of Science at the University of Oklahoma.Thomas Teo is an associate professor in the History and Theory of Psychology Program at York University. His areas of research and publication include the intellectual history of philosophical psychology, the historical, epistemological, and methodological foundations of critical psychology, and the history and theory of “race” and racism.Sara Tjossem is a lecturer at Columbia University in the School of International and Public Affairs. Her teaching and research interests are on the intersection of science and society, the history of biology (particularly in the twentieth century), the history of ecology and agriculture, marine science, and the development of environmental movements.Sheila Faith Weiss is Professor of History at Clarkson University. She has published widely on biomedicine in the Third Reich. Her most recent book is entitled The Nazi Symbiosis: Human Genetics and Politics in the Third Reich (Chicago, 2010). At present, she is working on a professional and political biography of Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer.Alex Wellerstein is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of the History of Science at Harvard University. His dissertation is on the history of nuclear secrecy in the United States.Simon Werrett is an associate professor in the Department of History at the University of Washington, Seattle. His book Fireworks: Pyrotechnic Arts and Sciences in European History was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2010.Duncan Wilson is a Wellcome Trust research fellow at Manchester University's Centre for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine (CHSTM). His research looks at the history of biological science and biomedical ethics in late nineteenth‐ and twentieth‐century Britain.Michael Wintroub is an Associate Professor in the Department of Rhetoric at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the author of A Savage Mirror: Power, Identity, and Knowledge in Early Modern France (Stanford, 2006). He is currently working on two projects: the first follows a group of provincial humanists, explorers, poets, and artists as they journeyed between the classical authorities they revered and the far‐flung shores of Africa, Asia, and America; the second examines the life and work of Marie Madeleine de Vignerod, the Duchesse d'Aiguillon, and her activities as a patron of natural philosophers, artists, and writers and as a sponsor of overseas expeditions to China, Siam, Cochinchine, and New France.Albena Yaneva is a lecturer at the University of Manchester. She has published widely in science studies and design studies. She is the author of The Making of a Building: A Pragmatist Approach to Architecture (2009) and Made by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture: An Ethnography of Design (2009).John H. Zammito is John Antony Weir Professor of History at Rice University. His publications include The Genesis of Kant's Critique of Judgment (Chicago, 1992), Kant, Herder, and the Birth of Anthropology (Chicago, 2002), and A Nice Derangement of Epistemes: Postpositivism in the Study of Science from Quine to Latour (Chicago, 2004). Previous articleNext article DetailsFiguresReferencesCited by Isis Volume 101, Number 4December 2010 Publication of the History of Science Society Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/664964 © 2010 by The History of Science Society. All rights reserved.PDF download Crossref reports no articles citing this article.
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