This paper explores the editorial policies and practices of three scientific journal published in Edinburgh in the first half of the 19th century. The first of these was the Edinburgh Philosophical Journal (1819–1826), and its continuation as the Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (1826–1854). It was edited until 1824 by Robert Jameson, Edinburgh's professor of natural history, and David Brewster, who was a natural philosopher, scientific writer, and editor. Brewster left in 1824 to found his own journal, the Edinburgh Journal of Science (1824–1832). The third journal published in Edinburgh in this period was the Edinburgh Journal of Natural and Geographical Science (1829–1831), edited by Henry H. Cheek and William Ainsworth, two medical s...
Public interest in science is often thought to have been much greater in the nineteenth century than...
what is often regarded as the first scien-tific journal.1 A second, the Philosophical Transactions o...
This thesis examines the close relationship between periodicals and the scientific practices of natu...
This paper explores the editorial policies and practices of three scientific journal published in Ed...
Editors: 1819-Apr. 1824, D. Brewster and R. Jameson.--July, 1824-1826, R. Jameson.Contains the proce...
Vol. 1-56 edited by Robert Jameson; vol. 57, by Laurence Jameson; New series, by Thomas Anderson, Si...
Contains the proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Wernerian Natural History Society, e...
The Scottish natural philosopher David Brewster played an important role in the history of the Royal...
Today, editors of science journals exercise a significant power over academic careers and the produc...
Editor: David Brewster.Publisher varies."... exhibiting a view of the progress of discovery in natur...
As scientists question the recent dominance of the scientific journal, the varied richness of its pa...
International audiencePublishing, albeit in many cases irregular, became one of the main activities ...
In the early nineteenth century, Edinburgh was the leading centre of medical education and research ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper scrutinizes the attempts of 19th-century Belgian and Dutch physician-editors to convey fo...
Public interest in science is often thought to have been much greater in the nineteenth century than...
what is often regarded as the first scien-tific journal.1 A second, the Philosophical Transactions o...
This thesis examines the close relationship between periodicals and the scientific practices of natu...
This paper explores the editorial policies and practices of three scientific journal published in Ed...
Editors: 1819-Apr. 1824, D. Brewster and R. Jameson.--July, 1824-1826, R. Jameson.Contains the proce...
Vol. 1-56 edited by Robert Jameson; vol. 57, by Laurence Jameson; New series, by Thomas Anderson, Si...
Contains the proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Wernerian Natural History Society, e...
The Scottish natural philosopher David Brewster played an important role in the history of the Royal...
Today, editors of science journals exercise a significant power over academic careers and the produc...
Editor: David Brewster.Publisher varies."... exhibiting a view of the progress of discovery in natur...
As scientists question the recent dominance of the scientific journal, the varied richness of its pa...
International audiencePublishing, albeit in many cases irregular, became one of the main activities ...
In the early nineteenth century, Edinburgh was the leading centre of medical education and research ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
This paper scrutinizes the attempts of 19th-century Belgian and Dutch physician-editors to convey fo...
Public interest in science is often thought to have been much greater in the nineteenth century than...
what is often regarded as the first scien-tific journal.1 A second, the Philosophical Transactions o...
This thesis examines the close relationship between periodicals and the scientific practices of natu...