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3
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84918223239
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His book is Styles of Scientific Thinking in the European Tradition: The History of Argument and Explanation Especially in the Mathematical and Biomedical Sciences and Arts (3 vols, London: Duckworth, forthcoming)
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5
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84918223238
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Der Untergang des Abendlandes: Umriss einer Morphologie der Weltgeschichte
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2 vols, Beck, Munich, translated by, 1926 Allen & Unwin London, Spengler's use of the word Stil is so generous that the translator says ‘The word “Stil” will therefore not necessarily be always rendered “style”’ (1926, vol. 1, p. 108, n. 2). Be prepared for surprises, e.g. ‘die Expansionkraft der abendländischen Stile’ (1918, vol. 2, p. 55, unchanged in the revised edition) is translated as ‘the expansion-power of the Western Soul’ (1926, vol. 2, p. 46).
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(1918)
The Decline of the West, Form and Actuality
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Spengler1
Atkinson2
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8
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0348210261
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The Principia, Universal Gravitation, and the “Newtonian Style”, in Relation to the Newtonian Revolution in Science: Notes on the Occasion of the 250th Anniversary of Newton's Death
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Zev Bechler, Reidel, Dordrecht, on p. 49. Cohen and Weinberg refer to Edmund Husserl
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(1982)
Contemporary Newtonian Research
, pp. 21-108
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Cohen1
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10
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84918223237
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part 2, section 9. Husserl certainly wrote “at large”, in this lengthy section, about Galileo as the discoverer of a new kind of science, but I don't think he called it, in so many words, ‘the Galilean style”. He seems to use the word Stil differently from Chomsky, Weinberg, Cohen, Crombie or myself. It is used six times, twice with emphasis in the original, on page 31 of the translation, but always to refer to a feature of the ‘empirically intuited world’.
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11
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52549093766
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Differences in Style as a Way of Probing the Context of Discovery
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(1990)
Philosophia
, vol.45
, pp. 53-75
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Gavroglu1
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15
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84965656314
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Designed in the Mind: Western Visions of Science, Nature and Humankind
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(1988)
History of Science
, vol.24
, pp. 1-12
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Crombie1
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20
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84857635287
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Alexandre Koyré and Great Britain Galileo and Mersenne
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For an explanation of Koyré's contribution to the myth, see
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(1987)
History and Technology
, vol.4
, pp. 81-92
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Crombie1
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23
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84918223236
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I draw the connection with styles of reasoning in my critical notice of the reissue of the book
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26
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84918223235
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After I submitted this paper to Studies, a nice popular account of some of these developments, mentioning a few of the mathematicians I had in mind, as well as the newly-launched Journal of Experimental Mathematics appeared as
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27
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84933483912
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New Wave Mathematics
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(1991)
New Sci
, pp. 33-37
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28
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84965656314
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Designed in the Mind: Western Visions of Science, Nature and Humankind
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(1988)
History of Science
, vol.24
, pp. 1
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Crombie1
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30
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84933484644
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Is Science only an Invention?
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Starting with, a review of Alan G. Gross, and letters by Mark Weatherall, 29 March; Neil Hirschson, 12 April; Alan Gross, Christopher Lawrence, and Steven Shapin, 19 April; and Durant, 12 April.
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(1991)
The Rhetoric of Science, Times Literary Supplement
, pp. 19
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Durant1
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31
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0002442143
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Statistical Language, Statistical Truth and Statistical Reason: The Self-Authentication of a Style of Reasoning
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Notre Dame University Press, Notre Dame, Ind
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(1992)
Social Dimensions of Science
, pp. 130-157
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Mcmullin1
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32
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0001855535
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The Self-Vindication of Laboratory Science
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Chicago University Press, Chicago, ‘Radically Constructivist Theories of Mathematical Progress’, to appear in an issue of Iride edited by A. Pagnini.
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(1992)
Science as Practice and Culture
, pp. 29-63
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Pickering1
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34
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84918223234
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His book is Styles of Scientific Thinking in the European Tradition: The History of Argument and Explanation Especially in the Mathematical and Biomedical Sciences and Arts (3 vols, London: Duckworth, forthcoming)
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39
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0003831728
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has already made substantial use of the idea of ‘anthropology’ drawn from Wittgenstein's Remarks; cf. his Wittgenstein, Macmillan, London, chapter 5
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(1983)
A Social Theory of Knowledge
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Bloor1
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40
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84918193433
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Mathematics an Anthropological Phenomenon
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I distanced myself from this use of the idea in my review of Bloor
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(1984)
Social Studies of Science
, vol.14
, pp. 469-476
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42
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0004176888
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Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, My own abuse of what Wittgenstein meant by anthropology has, on this occasion, more in common with Atran than with Latour. This is because Atran is concerned with what makes possible the taxonomic style (d), and he has a Chomskian vision of a universal and innate folk-taxonomy—see my review essay, London Review of Books, 21 February 1991. Latour's projected anthropology of science is sublimely anti-innatist. On the other hand these two authors have something in common, which is indefinitely distant from Wittgenstein's professed concerns: Atran is doing ‘real’ anthropology as I write, studying classification out there in the Gautemalan jungle, while Latour and Woolgar's Laboratory Life now serves as a role-model for a generation of young ethnographers of the laboratory.
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(1990)
Cognitive Foundations of Natural History: Towards an Anthropology of Science
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Atran1
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