Although the United States became politically independent of Great Britain in 1776, through much of the nineteenth century its science, like its economy and high culture, remained something akin to a colonial dependency of the original mother country. The development of scientific independence varied with discipline. For evolutionary biology, the stirrings of independence began in the late nineteenth century, and by World War I, American genetics, a child of evolutionary biology, had achieved equal rank with its British counterpart. This paper explores that change, principally via a quantitative assessment of genetics in the United States and Britain. Attention is given to the number of practitioners of the discipline, publication rates, t...
In the UK, the period after the Second World War is generally associated with the reformist ideas wh...
The first British geneticists framed the productive value of their work against national, internatio...
Prompted by recent recognitions of the omnipresence of horizontal gene transfer among microbial spec...
My thesis develops the concept of 'settings' for genetics research in 1930s Britain. It shows that s...
The activities of scientific practitioners at publicly supported agricultural colleges and experimen...
This paper addresses the topic of the intellectual and academic foundations of the eugenics movement...
This chapter considers a case in the early history of genetics, that of the foundation of the resear...
Eugenics in most western countries in the first four decades of the twentieth century was based on t...
For many years American science in the late 19th century was regarded as an intellectual backwater. ...
Historians of science have long recognized that agricultural institutions helped shape the first gen...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Mice and men reported from Edinburgh after the Congress (JOURNAL OF HEREDITY for September 1939) but...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Following the discovery of Mendel’s laws of inheritance in 1900 (PETERSON, 2010), several university...
The primary goal of Philip Thurtle's The Emergence of Genetic Rationality is ostensibly to address t...
In the UK, the period after the Second World War is generally associated with the reformist ideas wh...
The first British geneticists framed the productive value of their work against national, internatio...
Prompted by recent recognitions of the omnipresence of horizontal gene transfer among microbial spec...
My thesis develops the concept of 'settings' for genetics research in 1930s Britain. It shows that s...
The activities of scientific practitioners at publicly supported agricultural colleges and experimen...
This paper addresses the topic of the intellectual and academic foundations of the eugenics movement...
This chapter considers a case in the early history of genetics, that of the foundation of the resear...
Eugenics in most western countries in the first four decades of the twentieth century was based on t...
For many years American science in the late 19th century was regarded as an intellectual backwater. ...
Historians of science have long recognized that agricultural institutions helped shape the first gen...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Mice and men reported from Edinburgh after the Congress (JOURNAL OF HEREDITY for September 1939) but...
Following Thomas P. Hughes’s systems approach in the history of technology, and making use of previo...
Following the discovery of Mendel’s laws of inheritance in 1900 (PETERSON, 2010), several university...
The primary goal of Philip Thurtle's The Emergence of Genetic Rationality is ostensibly to address t...
In the UK, the period after the Second World War is generally associated with the reformist ideas wh...
The first British geneticists framed the productive value of their work against national, internatio...
Prompted by recent recognitions of the omnipresence of horizontal gene transfer among microbial spec...