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1.
Endeavour ; 48(1): 100914, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38537421

RESUMO

In his 1917 lecture for Munich students (most often entitled in English translation "Science as a Vocation"), Max Weber addressed numerous issues: not only how "profession" and "calling" are related in science and scholarship, but also Entzauberung ("disenchantment"); rationality and its limits; ultimate values; and the field of tension between science and religion. The present essay locates these themes in Weber's oeuvre from 1911 onward, and analyses how they resonate and culminate in Weber's address in 1917. It is in 1911 that he decided to engage with the problem that was to stand central in his thinking until his death in 1920: the nature and causes of certain specific turns in the course of European history which, so he argued, have proven to be of "universal significance." Special attention is given in the present essay to how Weber dealt in this connection with the rise of modern science and the rise of modern tonal harmony. A concluding section explains what, over a century later, makes reading Weber still so rewarding an experience.


Assuntos
Ocupações , Religião , Masculino , Humanos , Ciência Translacional Biomédica , Causalidade
2.
Br J Hist Sci ; 51(4): 687-701, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30566067

RESUMO

In his biography of Isaac Newton, which forms the most recent production in this flourishing genre, Niccolò Guicciardini states as his first point of departure that Newton's work arose not from 'attempts to answer questions that came to him spontaneously, but [from addressing] those posed by his contemporaries' (p. 20). Right he is to communicate to the larger audience for which he is writing this principal fruit of by now almost a century of professional history-of-science writing - a deep-seated awareness that every scientific view or finding, even if looking timeless in retrospect, has emerged from some given historical context that shows us where the scientist in question started, and that helps explain how, and in what direction, they managed to venture beyond the original context. Indeed, the same truth (or rather truism) applies to every genuine - that is, in some way innovative and also worthwhile - contribution to scholarship. And so it is, therefore, with the three books here under review, which I intend to examine with the following leading question in mind: what in each of them is new and what, in what turns out to be new indeed, has been worth learning?

3.
Isis ; 107(2): 309-10, 2016 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27439287

RESUMO

This "Viewpoint" section takes up the question of what, if anything, historians of science can learn from The History Manifesto, initially published in the fall of 2014. One summary, two essay reviews, and nine short comments are followed by remarks by the authors of the manifesto, Jo Guldi and David Armitage.


Assuntos
Historiografia , Ciência/história , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI
4.
Isis ; 107(3): 541, 2016 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28707855
6.
Isis ; 105(2): 401, 2014 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25154143
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