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Book Reviews

Book Reviews

Pages 579-597 | Published online: 19 Aug 2008
 

Notes

1Susan Leigh Star and James R. Griesemer, ‘Institutional Ecology, “Translations” and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology’, Social Studies in Science, 19 (1989), 387–420.

2Peter Galison, Image and Logic: A Material Culture of Microphysics (Chicago, 1997).

3R.A. Houston, Madness and Society in Eighteenth Century Scotland (Oxford, 2000); R.A. Houston, ‘Clergy and the Care of the Insane in Eighteenth-Century Britain’, Church History, 73 (2004), 114–38.

4N. Johnstone, ‘The Protestant Devil: The Experience of Temptation in Early Modern England’, Journal of British Studies, 43 (2004), 173–205; N. Landsman, ‘Evangelists and their Hearers: Popular Interpretation of Revivalist Preaching in Eighteenth-Century Scotland’, Journal of British Studies, 28 (1989), 120–49; D.G. Mullan, ‘Mistress Rutherford's Conversion Narrative’, Miscellany of the Scottish Church History Society XIII (Edinburgh: Lothian Print, 2004), 146–88. D. Oldridge, The Devil in Early Modern England (Stroud, UK: Sutton, 2000); K.L. Parker, ‘Richard Greenham's ‘Spiritual Physicke’: The Comfort of Afflicted Consciences in Elizabethan Pastoral Care’, in K.J. Lualdi and A.T. Thayer (eds), Penitence in the Age of Reformations (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2000), 71–83; E.R. Seeman, ‘Lay Conversion Narratives: Investigating Ministerial Intervention’, New England Quarterly 71 (1998), 629–34: L. Yeoman, ‘Archie's Invisible Worlds Discovered—Spirituality, Madness and Johnston of Wariston's Family’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 27 (1997), 156–86.

5Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith (New York:1995), p. 17.

6Heilbron's work was reissued with an Afterword and new subtitle, Max Planck and the Fortunes of German Science, but otherwise unchanged, by Harvard University Press in 2000. Recently translated into German as Max Planck (1858–1947): Ein Leben für die Wissenschaft (Stuttgart: Hirzel, 2006). Includes Planck's Wissentschaftliche Selbstbiographie, his recollection of his meeting with Hitler in May 1933 (initially published in 1947), and a number of popular writings. Martin J. Klein, Paul Ehrenfest (Amsterdam, 1970).

7See Allan Needell, ‘Irreversibility and the Failure of Classical Dynamics: Max Planck's Work on the Quantum Theory, 1900–1915’, Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University, 1980; Olivier Darrigol, ‘The Historians’ Disagreement over the Meaning of Planck's Quantum’, Centaurus 43 (2001), 219–239; and Clayton Gearhart, ‘Planck, the Quantum, and the Historians’, Physics in Perspective 4 (2002), 170–215. Also Peter Galison's important essay review of Kuhn's book, ‘Kuhn and the Quantum Controversy’, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (1981), 71–85.

8See notes 1 and 2 above.

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